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Shakespeare’s Use of Language

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Presentation on theme: "Shakespeare’s Use of Language"— Presentation transcript:

1 Shakespeare’s Use of Language
English as a Foreign Language

2 Shakespeare’s Form Rhetoric
Dressed up plain language in rich, sumptuous clothes for dramatic effect Vestige of Greek Works Part of the Elizabethan education

3 Shakespeare’s Form Iambic Pentameter
The line structure Shakespeare applied to all of his work. Iambic Refers to the series of unstressed and stressed syllables Unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable Ex: What thou seest…..

4 Shakespeare’s Form Pentameter Meter: foot, two counts per foot
Penta: five, five meters Five feet of two counts equal a 10 count line So, Iambic pentameter means: a ten count line in which the first syllable is unstressed and the next syllable is stressed and so on… EX: “Now, fair Hippolyta, our nuptial hour Draws on apace, four happy days bring in…”

5 Shakespeare’s Form Poetry Prose Verse
Some what free form- follows iambic pentameter, but does not rhyme. Ex: any time the mechanicals speak Verse Much more structured and follows a rhyme scheme Ex: any time royalty, the lovers or the fairies speak

6 Shakespeare’s Language
Why is Shakespeare’s language so difficult to understand? VOCABULARY What makes the vocabulary difficult to understand? CULTURAL STATIC

7 Shakespeare’s Language
Anastrophe: Unusual sentence structure Verb before subject “Full of vexation come I” Should be: I come full of vexation Object before subject and verb “And what is mine my love shall render him” Should be: My love shall render him what is mine Interruptions “My fortunes every was as fairly ranked, if not with vantage, as Demetrius Should be: My fortunes are as fairly ranked as Demetrius Omissions “Thrice blessed they that master so their blood” Should be: Thrice blessed are are they that master so their blood

8 Shakespeare’s Language
Wordplay Puns Malapropisms Bottom uses them frequently!!! Simile: illustrative comparison Ex: My love is like a red, red rose. Metaphor or extended simile Hyperbole Personification

9 Tricks for Comprehension
Line notes Numbers in the margins at the end of the lines- they mean something!!!! Rearrange the sentences Read for meaning If you don’t understand a word- skip it- then go back Imagine the stage action Make allowances for humor TRANSLATE


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