Shakespeare Vocabulary
Across
- 2. A violation of a law, command, or moral code
- 5. To settle a dispute between two parties by acting as a neutral third party
- 8. A rebellion against authority
- 10. Bending easily without breaking; flexible or adaptable
- 11. A tomb or burial chamber
- 15. To spread or promote (an idea, belief, etc.) widely
- 16. Respect and admiration
- 18. Impossible to stop, alter, or persuade; relentless
- 19. To overwhelm someone with things or people to be dealt with
- 20. Uncertainty or inexactness of meaning; something that can be interpreted in more than one way
Down
- 1. Brave and determined, especially in battle or in the face of danger
- 3. An enemy or opponent
- 4. People who hold beliefs that go against the accepted doctrine
- 6. A thin, sharp-pointed sword used in the 16th and 17th centuries, often for dueling
- 7. Deep in thought, often with a serious or sad mood
- 9. Relating to marriage or weddings
- 12. A complaint or resentment, especially against something believed to be unfair
- 13. A person who prepared and sold medicines and drugs; an early form of a pharmacist
- 14. Highly harmful or destructive, often in a subtle or gradual way
- 17. Extreme poverty; destitution
- 20. To make something greater by adding to it; to increase