"A" hose in Tudor times is a misnomer. Nowadays, a hose is, as you know, a long tube. However, in Tudor times "hose" was a plural word and meant "a pair of trousers", as in "doublet and hose" - the original version of "jacket and trousers". Etymologically (in their origins) the words are related. When you come to think about it, a pair of trousers is nothing but a pair of tubes stitched together.
Hose was the name given to tights, hence hosiery for tights and stockings
what kind of jobs and occupation do Elizabethan era had
no they didn't have bagels in the Elizabethan era. What kind of question is that?
Queen Elizabeth I, that time period was known as the Elizabethan Era
NO
1558-1603
The Elizabethan era was the Elizabethan era. It was the time when England became Protestant and the Renaissance became established in England. The Romantic era extended into the Victorian Era. They were two different Queens and two different eras.
If you mean to describe a time that was not Elizabethan, you could refer to the time before or after the Elizabethan era, such as the Tudor period or the Stuart period.
dick
The Elizabethan era had its own type of renaissance where there was a lot of new poetry and music. It was a time of peace, and the only enemy that England had at the time was Spain.
The Renaissance was a cultural movement that spanned the period roughly from the 14th to the 17th century. The Elizabethan era was in the 16th century.Therefore the answer to this question is NO - but the Elizabethan era was in the Renaissance era and some would regard the Elizabethan era as the height of the Renaissance era.
Yes, it was the era of Queen Elizabeth's reign.
Nobles didn't work in Elizabethan Era.
1558-1603 is the Elizabethan era in England.
what kind of jobs and occupation do Elizabethan era had
no they didn't have bagels in the Elizabethan era. What kind of question is that?
The Second Elizabethan Era or simply the Elizabethan Era
The Elizabethan Era was also called ( and known as) The Golden Age