Final answer:
Virginia Woolf's point is false; she argued that a woman with Shakespeare's talent wouldn't have been recognized in his time due to societal restrictions, not welcomed at the royal court.
Step-by-step explanation:
The statement that Virginia Woolf’s overall point is that a woman as talented as Shakespeare living in Shakespeare’s day would have been welcomed at the royal English court by Queen Elizabeth is false. Woolf's extended essay, A Room of One's Own, argues that historical societal restrictions and lack of opportunity prevented women from achieving the same literary prominence as men. She famously creates the hypothetical character of Shakespeare's sister to demonstrate that a woman with potential equal to Shakespeare's would not have had the opportunity to realize her talent due to societal limitations. Woolf suggests that if greatness in women like Shakespeare's imaginary sister was never acknowledged, it's because society did not provide women the necessary foundations, such as education, time, funding, and space to develop their talents.