Shakespeare and others
Crossword Clue

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AnswerCrossword Clue
TRAGEDIANSShakespeare and others.
ADONIS"Venus and ..." (Shakespeare poem)
SONNETEERSShakespeare and fellow souls.
CONTEMPORANEOUSLike Shakespeare and Bacon
TROILUSShakespeare play '-- and Cressida'
ATALE"And thereby hangs ....." (Shakespeare)
ATALE"And thereby hangs ..." (Shakespeare)
ASKNO"And ... other dowry ..." (Shakespeare)
ASKNO"And ... other dowry . . ." (Shakespeare)
WMSShakespeare and Shatner, for short
startingly(Shakespeare) in fits and starts
TALESCharles and Mary Lamb's "... From Shakespeare"
EVANSActor seen in Shakespeare and Shaw.
STARCROSSDLike Romeo and Juliet, to Shakespeare
CAESARSubject of plays by Shaw and Shakespeare
ALEAN"Yond Cassius has ... and hungry look" (Shakespeare)
IAGO"Some busy and insinuating rogue," in Shakespeare
ASIMOVHe wrote guides to Shakespeare and the Bible
YOND"... Cassius has a lean and hungry look" (Shakespeare)
EARSWhat friends, Romans and countrymen lent, in Shakespeare
AWASP"What ...-stung and impatient fool art thou"--Shakespeare
ITSAYS"And look you, here's your letter; this ..." (Shakespeare)
ASPAnimal ordered to "be angry, and dispatch," in Shakespeare
LEASEAnd summer's .... hath all too short a date : Shakespeare
fustilarian(Shakespeare) a fat and slovenly person also FUSTILIRIAN, FUSTILLIRIAN
abysmabyss the dark backward and abysm of time Shakespeare
orepearch(Shakespeare) to fly up and perch on also OVERPERCH
MOONSOFURANUSThey take the names of characters from Shakespeare and Pope
MEASUREWord before and after "for" in a Shakespeare play title
orepearchingOREPEARCH, (Shakespeare) to fly up and perch on also OVERPERCH
fustilariansFUSTILARIAN, (Shakespeare) a fat and slovenly person also FUSTILIRIAN, FUSTILLIRIAN
orepearchesOREPEARCH, (Shakespeare) to fly up and perch on also OVERPERCH
orepearchedOREPEARCH, (Shakespeare) to fly up and perch on also OVERPERCH
ETTUAntepenultimate and penultimate words of the penultimate sentence of a Shakespeare character
SCENEXIV"Antony and Cleopatra" is the only Shakespeare play to have one (in Act IV)
doed with the infinitive without to to form present and past tenses in legal and parliamentary language do hereby bequeath and in poetry give what she did crave Shakespeare
themose used especially as antecedent to a relative pronoun the best of them that speak this speech Shakespeare used as the subject of a verb chiefly in nonstandard speech and for humorous effect them is fighting words