shakespeare’s language romeo & juliet. shakespeare’s english shakespeare did not write in...

22
SHAKESPEARE’S LANGUAGE Romeo & Juliet

Upload: leslie-russell

Post on 23-Dec-2015

237 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: SHAKESPEARE’S LANGUAGE Romeo & Juliet. Shakespeare’s English  Shakespeare did not write in Old English or Middle English.Old English Middle English

SHAKESPEARE’S LANGUAGERomeo & Juliet

Page 2: SHAKESPEARE’S LANGUAGE Romeo & Juliet. Shakespeare’s English  Shakespeare did not write in Old English or Middle English.Old English Middle English

Shakespeare’s English

Shakespeare did not write in Old English or Middle English.

Shakespeare wrote in Early Modern English.

Early Modern English is only one generation of language from the English you speak today!

Page 3: SHAKESPEARE’S LANGUAGE Romeo & Juliet. Shakespeare’s English  Shakespeare did not write in Old English or Middle English.Old English Middle English

Shakespeare’s Contributions

Shakespeare only had an 8th grade education.

There were no dictionaries. Shakespeare is credited by the Oxford

English Dictionary with the introduction of nearly 3,000 words into the language.

His vocabulary numbers upward of 17,000 words (quadruple that of an average, well-educated conversationalist in the language)

Page 4: SHAKESPEARE’S LANGUAGE Romeo & Juliet. Shakespeare’s English  Shakespeare did not write in Old English or Middle English.Old English Middle English

A Few Words By Shakespeare

Accused Addiction Admirable Assassination Bloodstained Cold-blooded Coldhearted Deafening

Disgraceful To drug Excitement Fashionable Fortune-teller Gloomy Mimic Obscene

Page 5: SHAKESPEARE’S LANGUAGE Romeo & Juliet. Shakespeare’s English  Shakespeare did not write in Old English or Middle English.Old English Middle English

Phrases Coined by Shakespeare

As good luck would have it

Be-all and the end-all

Break the ice Eaten me out of

house and home Elbow room Fool's paradise For goodness'

sake

Full circle Good riddance It was Greek to

me Heart of gold In a pickle Kill with kindness Lie low Love is blind Not slept one

wink

Page 6: SHAKESPEARE’S LANGUAGE Romeo & Juliet. Shakespeare’s English  Shakespeare did not write in Old English or Middle English.Old English Middle English

Shakespeare’s English

In the England of Shakespeare's time, English was a lot more flexible as a language.

The most common simple sentence in modern English follows a familiar pattern: Subject (S), Verb (V), Object (O). (Will caught the ball).

However, Shakespeare was much more at liberty to switch these three basic components

Shakespeare used a great deal of SOV inversion (Will the ball caught).

Page 7: SHAKESPEARE’S LANGUAGE Romeo & Juliet. Shakespeare’s English  Shakespeare did not write in Old English or Middle English.Old English Middle English

Shakespeare’s English

Switching the S-V-O order to S-O-V made it easier for Shakespeare to rhyme and to manipulate his words to flow easily in poems and plays.

Shakespeare could effectively place the metrical stress wherever he needed it most by switching word order

Shakespeare also used an O-S-V construction (The ball Will caught) for the same reasons.

Page 8: SHAKESPEARE’S LANGUAGE Romeo & Juliet. Shakespeare’s English  Shakespeare did not write in Old English or Middle English.Old English Middle English

Inverted Word Order

Lady Montague: O where is Romeo, saw you him today? Right glad I am he was not at this fray. Translation: O where is Romeo; did you see him

today? I am very glad he was not in this fight.

Page 9: SHAKESPEARE’S LANGUAGE Romeo & Juliet. Shakespeare’s English  Shakespeare did not write in Old English or Middle English.Old English Middle English

Inverted Word Order

“Thou hast by moonlight at her window sung.”

Translation: You have sung at her window in the

moonlight. From A Midsummer Night’s Dream

Page 10: SHAKESPEARE’S LANGUAGE Romeo & Juliet. Shakespeare’s English  Shakespeare did not write in Old English or Middle English.Old English Middle English

Shakespeare’s Language in Plays

The language used by Shakespeare in his plays is in one of three forms Prose Rhymed Verse Blank Verse

Page 11: SHAKESPEARE’S LANGUAGE Romeo & Juliet. Shakespeare’s English  Shakespeare did not write in Old English or Middle English.Old English Middle English

Prose

Prose is writing which resembles everyday speech

Prose is often used by Shakespeare for lower-class characters in his plays

Prose lacks meter and rhyme and is informal

Shakespeare blends prose with poetry in his plays

Page 12: SHAKESPEARE’S LANGUAGE Romeo & Juliet. Shakespeare’s English  Shakespeare did not write in Old English or Middle English.Old English Middle English

Rhymed Verse

The majority of Shakespeare’s plays contain rhymed verse which looks like poetry

Characters– especially of the higher classes--speak in poetic form

Their words have form, meter, and rhyme Rhymed verse in Shakespeare's plays is

usually in rhymed couplets, i.e. two successive lines of verse of which the final words rhyme with another.

Page 13: SHAKESPEARE’S LANGUAGE Romeo & Juliet. Shakespeare’s English  Shakespeare did not write in Old English or Middle English.Old English Middle English

Iambic Pentameter

Iambic pentameter is meter that Shakespeare nearly always when writing in verse. Most of his plays were written in iambic pentameter.

Iambic Pentameter has: Ten syllables in each line Five pairs of alternating unstressed and

stressed syllables The rhythm in each line sounds like:

ba-BUM / ba-BUM / ba-BUM / ba-BUM / ba-BUM

Page 14: SHAKESPEARE’S LANGUAGE Romeo & Juliet. Shakespeare’s English  Shakespeare did not write in Old English or Middle English.Old English Middle English

Iambic Pentameter Example

Examples of Iambic Pentameter: If mu- / -sic be / the food / of love, /

play on Is this / a dag- / -ger I / see be- / fore

me? Each pair of syllables is called an iamb.

You’ll notice that each iamb is made up of one unstressed and one stressed beat (ba-BUM).

Page 15: SHAKESPEARE’S LANGUAGE Romeo & Juliet. Shakespeare’s English  Shakespeare did not write in Old English or Middle English.Old English Middle English

Blank Verse

Blank verse refers to unrhymed iambic pentameter.

resembles prose in that the final words of the lines do not rhyme in any regular pattern

There is meter: a recognizable rhythm in a line of verse consisting of a pattern of regularly recurring stressed and unstressed syllables. 

Most lines are in iambic pentameter.

Page 16: SHAKESPEARE’S LANGUAGE Romeo & Juliet. Shakespeare’s English  Shakespeare did not write in Old English or Middle English.Old English Middle English

Blank Verse Example

ROMEO: But, soft! what light through yonder window breaks?

It is the east, and Juliet is the sun.

 Arise, fair sun, and kill the envious moon,

Who is already sick and pale with grief,

 That thou, her maid, art far more fair than she.

 Be not her maid, since she is envious;

Her vestal livery is but sick and green

And none but fools do wear it; cast it off. from Romeo and Juliet

Page 17: SHAKESPEARE’S LANGUAGE Romeo & Juliet. Shakespeare’s English  Shakespeare did not write in Old English or Middle English.Old English Middle English

Prose, Rhymed Verse or Blank Verse?

Juliet: Wilt thou be gone? It is not yet near day.

It was the nightingale, and not the lark, That pierced the fearful hollow of thine

ear; Nightly she sings on yond pomegranate

tree Believe me, love, it was the nightingale.

Page 18: SHAKESPEARE’S LANGUAGE Romeo & Juliet. Shakespeare’s English  Shakespeare did not write in Old English or Middle English.Old English Middle English

Blank Verse

Page 19: SHAKESPEARE’S LANGUAGE Romeo & Juliet. Shakespeare’s English  Shakespeare did not write in Old English or Middle English.Old English Middle English

Prose, Rhymed Verse or Blank Verse?

Abraham: Do you bite your thumb at us, sir?

Sampson: No, sir, I do not bite my thumb at you, sir, but I bite my thumb, sir.

Gregory: Do you quarrel, sir? Abraham: Quarrel, sir? No, sir.

Page 20: SHAKESPEARE’S LANGUAGE Romeo & Juliet. Shakespeare’s English  Shakespeare did not write in Old English or Middle English.Old English Middle English

Prose

Page 21: SHAKESPEARE’S LANGUAGE Romeo & Juliet. Shakespeare’s English  Shakespeare did not write in Old English or Middle English.Old English Middle English

Prose, Rhymed Verse or Blank Verse?

Full fathom five thy father lies Of his bones are coral made Those are pearls that were his eyes Nothing of him that doth fade But doth suffer a sea change Into something rich and strange.

Page 22: SHAKESPEARE’S LANGUAGE Romeo & Juliet. Shakespeare’s English  Shakespeare did not write in Old English or Middle English.Old English Middle English

Rhymed Verse