Advertisement

Advertisement

Peele

[ peel ]

noun

  1. George, 1558?–97?, English dramatist.


Peele

/ piːl /

noun

  1. PeeleGeorge?1556?1596MEnglishTHEATRE: dramatistWRITING: poet George. ?1556–?96, English dramatist and poet. His works include the pastoral drama The Arraignment of Paris (1584) and the comedy The Old Wives' Tale (1595)


Discover More

Example Sentences

Keegan-Michael Key and Jordan Peele are returning for the fourth season of their eponymous hit Comedy Central show.

Peele says the sketch is a celebration of unique black names.

In their latest sketch, Key and Peele pit Martin Luther King Jr.

Jordan Peele, known for both his work on MadTV and David Alan Grier's Chocolate News, he is the rumored favorite to play Obama.

Among these may still be seen the rudely cut letters of the names of Byron, Sheridan and Peele.

He has, notwithstanding, in his comedy parts, more natural lightness and grace than either Marlowe or Peele.

The ghost of Jack, whom Peele tells us about, is a case of a ghost coming back to befriend his undertaker.

Nash was about thirty-three years old when he died in 1600; Marlowe was twenty-nine, Peele thirty, Greene thirty-two.

But even the scandals about Peele are much more shadowy than those about Marlowe and Greene.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement


peel-and-stickpeeler