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  1. Feb 14, 2024 · 日常英会話に役立つマジックワード「as you like」の使い方. こんにちはRYO英会話ジムです。. 「as you like」は、日常英会話でよく耳にするフレーズです。. 柔軟性や選択の自由を表現する際に便利なこの表現は、様々な状況で使われ、会話をスムーズに進めるの ...

  2. Jul 31, 2015 · Act 4, scene 1. Scene 1. Synopsis: Rosalind, as Ganymede, pretends to be Rosalind while Orlando courts her. With Celia as priest, they go through the beginning of a wedding ceremony. Enter Rosalind ⌜as Ganymede,⌝ and Celia ⌜as Aliena,⌝. and Jaques. JAQUES I prithee, pretty youth, let me ⌜ be ⌝ better. acquainted with thee.

  3. Jul 31, 2015 · Scene 3. Synopsis: Duke Frederick suddenly decides to banish Rosalind. His daughter Celia, determined to go with Rosalind into exile, suggests that they seek the banished duke in the Forest of Arden, and that, for safety on their journey, they disguise themselves as a country girl and her brother. They agree to ask the court Fool, Touchstone ...

  4. As You Like It. PG | romantic dramas | 2 HR 7 MIN | 2007. WATCH NOW. Kenneth Branagh's exotic adaptation of Shakespeare's delightful stage comedy in which a courtship plays out in the Forest of Arden. Watch As You Like It online at HBO.com. Stream on any device any time. Explore cast information, synopsis and more.

  5. Full Title As You Like It. Author William Shakespeare. Type of work Play. Genre Comedy, pastoral. Language English. Time and place written 1598–1600; London, England. Date of first publication First published in the Folio of 1623. Publisher Isaac Jaggard and Edmund Blount.

  6. Jul 31, 2015 · Act 4, scene 3. Scene 3. Synopsis: Phoebe sends “Ganymede” a letter offering herself in marriage. As Rosalind and Celia wait for Orlando, they learn that he is late for his appointment with “Ganymede” because he was wounded saving his brother Oliver from attack by a lion. Enter Rosalind ⌜dressed as Ganymede⌝ and Celia. ⌜dressed as ...

  7. As You Like It was written near the end of Queen Elizabeth’s reign over England. Elizabethan England was a highly patriarchal society in which women had very few rights and marriages were arranged. To marry someone out of love was considered foolish and the court in general dictated strict rules for the conduct of English royalty and citizens.

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