Romeojuliet introduction
Transcript of Romeojuliet introduction
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Shakespeare Notes
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Video on William Shakespeare
https://my.hrw.com/content/hmof/language_arts/hmhcollections/resources/gr9/history_ae_videos/index.html
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William Shakespeare lived from 1564-1616 and made his home in the town of Stratford-upon-Avon in England.
It is a beautiful town on a river with a very artistic and rustic feel about the place.
stratford-upon-avon
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william shakespeare
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stratford-upon-avon
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stratford-upon-avon
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his house
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The Globe Theatre was built in London, England, in 1599. It was owned by Shakespeare’s acting company, The Lord Chamberlain’s Men.
Many of Shakespeare’s plays were originally performed here, all the way until the Puritans ordered the Globe to close its doors in 1642.
the globe theatre
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the globe theatre
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the globe theatre
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the globe theatre
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The Pit
The ApronStage
the globe theatre
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Groundlings – All the people who paid a penny to stand in the pit
Hazelnuts – the popcorn of choice at plays during Shakespeare’s time
facts
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38 Plays 154 Sonnets
2 Long Narrative Poems
Several Other Poems
his work
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Green-eyed Monster
A method to my madnessA spotless reputation
For goodness sakeGood riddance
A wild goose chase
Knock knock…who’s there?
Kill all the lawyers.Too much of a good thing
Have seen better days
Wearing your heart on your sleeve
The world’s my oyster.
Put your best foot forward.Breaking the ice.
All’s well that ends well.As luck would have it
Breathed his lastRefused to budge an inch
Every dog will have his day.
The devil incarnateEating me out of house and home
Elbow room
famous sayings
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A foregone conclusion
Heart of goldComing full circle
In a pickleKill with kindness
It was Greek to me. What’s done is done.Own flesh and blood
As obvious as the nose on your faceSeen better days
The long and short of itSet my teeth on edge
Laughing stock
Melted into thin airLove is blind
Couldn’t sleep a winkOut of the jaws of death
There’s no such thing.
Send someone packingA sorry sight
To thine own self be true.What the dickens?
famous sayings
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advertising
assassination anchovy
bedroom bump
alligator
cold-blooded deafening disgraceful eyeball
fortune-teller
gloomy
lackluster impartial
leaky leapfrog
freezing
luggage manager moonbeam new-fangled perplex
puppy-dog
roadway restoration
satisfying savagery
puking
schoolboy silliness vulnerable watchdog worn out
words he first wrote
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Elizabethan Language
• Elizabethan refers to anything that is from or related to the time period in which Queen Elizabeth I ruled over England.
Excerpt from p. 178 of textbook:an, and: if
anon: soon; right away
aught: anything
ere: before
hence: from here
hie: hurry
morrow: morning
prithee: pray thee, or please
Translate: An aught should happen ere the morrow, prithee hie to send a message anon hence. (2 min)