SHAKESPEARE S LANGUAGE

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SHAKESPEARE S LANGUAGE The road to a modern re-telling SHAKESPEARE S EFFECT ON THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE The Oxford English Dictionary credits Shakespeare with introducing nearly 3,000 words into the language between 1500-1650. (Hamlet alone has 600 new words). For example: Bloody, hurry, generous, impartial, road, critical, frugal, dwindle, extract, horrid, vast, excellent, eventful, assassination, lonely, suspicious, indistinguishable, well-read, zany, countless 1

SHAKESPEARE S PHRASES ARE NOW OUR CLICHÉS into thin air in a pickle budge an inch flesh and blood foul play cruel to be kind pomp and circumstance catch a cold heart of gold method in his madness too much of a good thing break the ice good riddance love is blind wear my heart upon my sleeve wild-goose chase for goodness' sake IN PERSPECTIVE Scholars estimate Shakespeare s vocabulary at between 25,000 and 29,000 words, nearly twice that of the average college student. The normal working vocabulary of a speaker of English is around 5,000 words. 2

ONE SINGULAR SENSATION In the words of Louis Marder, "Shakespeare was so facile* in employing words that he was able to use over 7,000 of them more than occur in the whole King James version of the Bible only once and never again." *working with ease COMMON CONTRACTIONS Shown below are a few of the most common contractions found in Shakespeare. 'tis = it is ope = open o'er = over gi' = give oft = often ne'er = never e'er = ever e'en = even i'=in a'=he Shakespeare s language uses literal contractions (see above), but also contracts ideas through concise word choice for different purposes. 3

SPECIAL VOCABULARY: CONTRACTIONS Some readers complain about these poetic contractions used to create the correct number of syllables in a line. But consider this exchange overhead in the hallway (along with their possible translations): Goin to class? Already been. And? Whatever. Are you going to class? I have already been to class. And how was it? (or And did you enjoy it? or happened in class? etc.) What business is it of yours? Or It was a most enjoyable class, perhaps the best of my academic career, etc. SYNTAX: HOW WORDS ARE ARRANGED Take the simple sentence I ate the sandwich. The sentence can be rewritten by changing the order of the words, but not the meaning of the sentence. I ate the sandwich. Ate I the sandwich. I the sandwich ate. The sandwich I ate. Ate the sandwich I. The sandwich ate I. 4

INVERSION In modern English, the most common sentence pattern is: subject (S), verb (V), object (O) OR I (S) ate (V) the sandwich (O). Shakespeare used inversion to create specific dramatic and poetic effects. Inversion can be used to emphasize key words, to create specific poetic rhythms, to give a character a specific speech pattern or for a variety of other purposes. SHAKESPEARE S STYLE Examples: Round about the cauldron go; in the poison entrails throw. Else the Puck a liar call. For them the gracious Duncan have I murdered. I like him not. Do these examples sound familiar? 5

YODISH: YODA S SPEAKING STYLE Usual pattern: subject (S), verb (V), object (O) Yoda speaks using: object (O), subject (S), verb (V) Yoda: Much to learn you still have. Today, we say: "With this ring, I thee wed." RHETORICAL DEVICES Alliteration: repetition of the same initial consonant sound throughout a line of verse "When to the sessions of sweet silent thought..." (Sonnet XXX) Anaphora: repetition of a word or phrase as the beginning of successive clauses "Mad world! Mad kings! Mad composition!" (King John, II, i) Antithesis : juxtaposition, or contrast of ideas or words in a balanced or parallel construction "Not that I loved Caesar less, but that I loved Rome more." (Julius Caesar, III, ii) 6

RHETORICAL DEVICES CONTINUED Metaphor: implied comparison between two unlike things achieved through the figurative use of words. "Now is the winter of our discontent / Made glorious summer by this son of York." (Richard III, I, i) Onomatopoeia: use of words to imitate natural sounds "There be moe wasps that buzz about his nose." (Henry VIII, III, ii) Simile: an explicit comparison between two things using "like" or "as" "My love is as a fever, longing still For that which longer nurseth the disease" (Sonnet CXLVII) SO...WHAT ARE SHAKESPEARE S LANGUAGE TRICKS? Personification Metaphor Simile Classical allusions Reversed word, thought or sentence structure (inversion) Antithesis Contractions Rhetorical devices 7

21 ST CENTURY ROMEO AND JULIET Brainstorm important events from the play. Use the summary to decide what is vital to include in your re-telling. The language is the point so how can you take an idea and say it for today s audience (your peers)? What is the language of your audience? Remember it s a play so try and visualize what you say. MODERN LANGUAGE: IN TRANSITION ACRONYMS FOMO = Fear of Missing Out Ex: I have to go to that party! I have severe FOMO! SLANG fleek (on-point or very good) à snatched Ex: Your words are always on fleek! 8

MODERN: VISUAL LANGUAGE HASHTAG # = creating a label that can be grouped and searched electronically YouTube Hashtag EMOJI BIBLIOGRAPHY Garret, J. Reading Shakespeare s Language. 1 April 2016. PDF file. Moon, Harold. 23 Slang Words and Phrases You Should Know In 2015. The Odyssey Online.com. Odyssey, 3 July 2015. Web. 5 April 2016. Saint Louis Public School (SLPS). Shakespeare s Writing Style. 1 April 2016. PowerPoint. 9