ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
Author Videos 248 videos
We may all be fools when it comes to love, but thankfully none of us will accidentally switch places with our twin brother and fall in love with ou...
Books become classics because they either reflect on or influence the world around us. As was the casewith Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart. Of...
Words, Words, Words 2363 Views
Share It!
Description:
Your favorite hip hop artist's bumpin' slang may be off the chain, but no one has left a mark on the English language quite like Shakespeare did. The man deserves his own dictionary. Ya feel us, homeskillets?
Transcript
- 00:00
Words, Words, Words, a la Shmoop. Ever wonder why so many people consider Shakespeare
- 00:09
to be the greatest writer of the English language?
- 00:12
It wasn't because he was so prolific, producing comic, tragic, and historical plays, as well
- 00:17
as poetry.
- 00:18
It wasn't because his works deal with the full spectrum of human emotions.
Full Transcript
- 00:21
It wasn't because he authored plays where characters drop like flies.
- 00:26
Nope. The reason why every English department in the country has a shrine dedicated to Shakespeare…
- 00:32
…is because the Bard of Avon had a gift for words.
- 00:36
Words, words, words. Shakespeare knew them backwards and forwards, and he used them in
- 00:40
a variety of ways.
- 00:41
For instance, he was famous for giving his characters dramatic speeches.
- 00:45
There’s the Saint Crispin's Day Speech in Henry V, where the title character rouses
- 00:51
his tired troops to kick French butt and take French names at the Battle of Agincourt.<<adj-in-court>>
- 00:57
Shakespeare’s sonnets, too, contain beautiful, poetic language that has appealed to romantics
- 01:02
for centuries.
- 01:03
His Sonnet 116, where he writes that “love is not love which alters when its alteration
- 01:09
finds”…
- 01:09
…was a central piece of dialogue in the 1995 film adaptation of Sense and Sensibility,
- 01:15
starring… Severus Snape and Professor Trelawney. Most incredibly, Shakespeare's gift for words
- 01:21
allowed him to create thousands of words and phrases that we still use today.
- 01:25
Now, we know what you're thinking: anyone can come up with a new word or phrase.
- 01:29
Didn't American soldiers during World War Two add FUBAR, SNAFU, and TARFU to the lexicon?
- 01:35
Didn't a BBC political satire invent the word “omnishambles?”
- 01:40
While it's true that new words and phrases regularly make their way into the English
- 01:43
language, the sheer number of Shakespeare's contributions is incredible.
- 01:49
Have you ever been “critical” or even a little “obscene”?
- 01:53
Have you ever thought that your “manager” wasn't very “fashionable?”
- 01:57
All Shakespeare words. That guy really knew how to string letters together.
- 02:01
Phrases, too, were a Shakespearean specialty, and you've probably used many of his creations
- 02:06
in everyday conversation.
- 02:08
Have you ever played “fast and loose” with the truth, like the time you told your
- 02:12
math teacher that the dog ate your homework?
- 02:15
Do you eat Thanksgiving dinner with your “flesh and blood”? Hopefully you don't eat them
- 02:21
for Thanksgiving. There are laws about that sort of thing.
- 02:26
“Fast and loose”, “flesh and blood”, “green-eyed jealousy”, “devil incarnate”,
- 02:31
“foul play”, and “one fell swoop”… all coined by Shakespeare.
- 02:35
So next time you think your Shakespeare-loving English teacher is living in a “fool's paradise”...
- 02:40
...think again. It's pretty much a “foregone conclusion” that you're quoting Shakespeare,
- 02:44
and that's… “the long and short of it”.
Related Videos
We may all be fools when it comes to love, but thankfully none of us will accidentally switch places with our twin brother and fall in love with ou...
They say that honesty is the best policy, but Jack lies about his identity and still gets the girl. Does that mean we should all lie to get what we...
Ever wish you could remember everything that you ever studied? How about everything that everyone has ever studied? Yeah, pretty sure our brains ju...
Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man is an American classic. Hope you're not expecting any exciting shower scenes though. It's not that kind of book.
Do not go gentle into that good night. In fact, if it's past your curfew, don't go at all into that good night. You just stay in your good bed and...