| Answer | % Correct |
|---|---|
| To be, or not to be: that is the {question}: | 100%
|
| The {heart}-ache and the thousand natural shocks | 82%
|
| {Whether} 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer | 82%
|
| And by opposing end them? To die: to {sleep}; | 76%
|
| Or to take arms against a {sea} of troubles, | 76%
|
| Devoutly to be wish'd. To {die}, to sleep; | 75%
|
| The slings and arrows of outrageous {fortune}, | 74%
|
| When we have shuffled off this mortal {coil}, | 73%
|
| To sleep; perchance to dream: ay, there's the {rub}; | 70%
|
| For in that sleep of death what {dreams} may come | 60%
|
| The pangs of despised {love}, the law's delay, | 49%
|
| That makes calamity of so long {life}; | 48%
|
| For who would {bear} the whips and scorns of time, | 47%
|
| That flesh is {heir} to, 'tis a consummation | 46%
|
| No traveller {returns}, puzzles the will | 45%
|
| Thus conscience does make {cowards} of us all; | 44%
|
| The undiscover'd {country} from whose bourn | 43%
|
| But that the dread of something {after} death, | 39%
|
| To grunt and {sweat} under a weary life, | 32%
|
| And enterprises of {great} pith and moment | 29%
|
| Is sicklied o'er with the pale cast of {thought}, | 29%
|
| Than {fly} to others that we know not of? | 29%
|
| The insolence of {office} and the spurns | 29%
|
| And lose the name of {action}. | 28%
|