Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. Dictionary
    Hamlet
    /ˈhamlɪt/
    • 1. a legendary prince of Denmark, hero of a tragedy by Shakespeare.

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. HAMLET | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary. Meaning of hamlet in English. hamlet. noun [ C ] uk / ˈhæm.lət / us / ˈhæm.lət / Add to word list. a small village, usually without a church. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Towns & regions: towns, cities & villages (general) aerotropolis. anti-city. anti-urban. boom town. Brummie.

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › HamletHamlet - Wikipedia

    The Tragedy of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark, usually shortened to Hamlet ( / ˈhæmlɪt / ), is a tragedy written by William Shakespeare sometime between 1599 and 1601. It is Shakespeare's longest play.

  4. Noun. Before their arrival the rural hamlet — a former tobacco plantation that dates back to the 16th century and a cattle breeding farm from the early 1900s — was in disarray, including the two-level building that once housed the homes of the farm’s workers and their families.

  5. Jun 18, 2024 · Hamlet adopts a guise of melancholic and mad behaviour as a way of deceiving Claudius and others at court—a guise made all the easier by the fact that Hamlet is genuinely melancholic. Understand the use of soliloquy in William Shakespeare's “Hamlet”

  6. hamlet. 2 meanings: 1. a small village or group of houses 2. (in Britain) a village without its own church.... Click for more definitions.

  7. HAMLET | definition in the Cambridge English Dictionary. Meaning of hamlet in English. hamlet. noun [ C ] us / ˈhæm.lət / uk / ˈhæm.lət / Add to word list. a small village, usually without a church. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Towns & regions: towns, cities & villages (general) aerotropolis. anti-city. anti-urban. boom town.

  8. noun. a small village. British. a village without a church of its own, belonging to the parish of another village or town. hamlet. 2. [ ham -lit ] Phonetic (Standard)IPA. noun. , plural (especially collectively) ham·let, (especially referring to two or more kinds or species) ham·lets.

  9. Hamlet by William Shakespeare. The Tragedy of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark, usually shortened to just Hamlet, was written by William Shakespeare sometime between 1599-1602. It is arguably one of his most famous tragedies. The lines from Hamlet's monologue in act three that begin "To be, or not to be..."

  10. That small settlement you pass through along a country road is not just a cluster of houses. It’s a hamlet. You may be familiar with Shakespeare’s famous play describing the plight of the doomed prince Hamlet.

  11. /ˈhæmlət/ the main character in the play of the same name by William Shakespeare, written in about 1601. Many people consider it Shakespeare's finest play. Hamlet, the Prince of Denmark, becomes very sad when his father, the king, dies and his uncle, Claudius, becomes king.

  1. People also search for