The quotation is from Hamlet, Act II Scene 2 "Polonius: Though this be madness, yet there is method in't"
There is nothing known as Shakespearean food unless they are some food /menu mentioned in his plays that have different locations (Italy,Egypt,Germany etc) yet in the Elizabethan era.The food mentioned in some of his plays are bread/ale which the commoners ate during the time or the meat/poultry/wine that the nobles enjoyed .
Women weren't allowed to be in theatrical plays so men always played both male and female roles. The female roles usually went to men whose voices hadn't gotten deeper yet.
Millers diction is formal, yet simple and easy to understand. His language is plain and concise.
Sephano is intrigued that Caliban knows the English language yet still views him as a savage animal
YAL stands for "yet another language." It doesn't have a word for 'hi."
No, because if he isn't a bachelor 'yet', then what is he? Yet in this example would make no sense, and the sentence would not make sense. But you can say: He is not divorced yet. She is not twenty-one years old yet.
Arguably, it is the husband. Others would say that there is no antagonist. yet others would say that the thief is the antagonist.
"I have not yet begun to fight!"
Are you asleep / Are you dead You could still say yes to those questions, but you would be lying.
There is no word for the noun "aviator" in latin, as aviation is a concept which did not yet exist when latin became a dead language
It's not yet
The quotation is from Hamlet, Act II Scene 2 "Polonius: Though this be madness, yet there is method in't"
If you mean grammatically, no, the proper speech would be "the lectures have not (or haven't) begun yet".
. I don't know yet. I think I would say maybe.
I would have to say .. No. Laytrel Mcmullen is not yet famous. But will soon become.
Someone would say this when they are exaggerating how hungry they are.