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Answer for the clue "Writer of at least 154 sonnets ", 11 letters:
shakespeare

Alternative clues for the word shakespeare

Word definitions for shakespeare in dictionaries

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Shakespeare is an English family name most commonly associated with William Shakespeare (1564–1616), an English playwright and poet. Other notable people with the surname include:

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
surname recorded from 1248; it means "a spearman." This was a common type of English surname ( Shakelance (1275), Shakeshaft (1332)). Shake (v.) in the sense of "to brandish or flourish (a weapon)" is attested from late Old English\nHeo scæken on heore ...

Usage examples of shakespeare.

In other words, a sort of quirk of history, the kind Shakespeare drew on freely when he needed a plot or a character?

The plays of Shakespeare did not escape the most bitter animadversions of the moral reformers.

You have to turn back to Shakespeare for any talk of peasants and clowns and shepherds to compare with the conversations in this novel, so racy are they of the soil, and yet so touched with the finest art, the enduring art.

This theory, as foolish and as unsupported as the Baconian theory of Shakespeare, has been carelessly accepted, or at all events accepted as possible, by many good scholars who have never taken the trouble to look into the matter for themselves.

Wayne, Dean, Duane, for Norvis, Shakespeare, Big Dread, for Godfrey the barman, for Fucker Burke, for Basim and Manjeet, for Bogdan, Maciek, Zbigniew.

Between brass bookends, each a miniature bust of Shakespeare, are the novels she collects at yard sales.

At her desk beneath the Shakespeare bookends, Tessie wrote back faithfully, if not entirely truthfully.

Tolstoy criticizes Shakespeare not as a poet, but as a thinker and a teacher, and along those lines he has no difficulty in demolishing him.

The lovers of Shakespeare ought to have seen that their idol had been debunked, that in fact he had no merits, and they ought to have ceased forthwith to take any pleasure in him.

Shakespeare and Shelley, for instance, far from being hampered by the conventional obligation to write their dramas in verse, found it much the easiest and cheapest way of producing them.

Hence it came that Asquith, before the house-warming, knew as little about Farquhar Fenelon Cooke, the man, as the nineteenth century knows about William Shakespeare, and was every whit as curious.

When Shakespeare was managing his theatres and writing his plays London was full of foreigners, settled in the city, who no doubt formed part of his audience, for they thought that English players had attained great perfection.

However, he made Shakespeare, the Freetown halfbreed, come up to his own end of the canoe and tell him about Porroh, which Shakespeare, failing in his attempts to leave Pollock alone, presently did with considerable freedom and gusto.

The modern artistic temperament cannot understand how a man who could write such lyrics as Shakespeare wrote, could be as keen as Shakespeare was on business transactions in a little town in Warwickshire.

It was a convoy of motorhomes on their way to the Shakespeare Festival in Ashland, Oregon.