How do you talk like Romeo and Juliet?

"Instead of saying, 'Hey you,' [it's] 'Hark thee!' or 'Prithee,' " says Barbara Gaines, founder and artistic director of the Chicago Shakespeare Theater. "Instead of saying, 'you,' say 'thou. ' The men are called 'sirrah,' and the ladies are called 'mistress.
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Did people actually talk like in Romeo and Juliet?

They are dramatic works, and the dialogue was manipulated to suit the stage. Therefore his characters' language did not always reflect how real people would have spoken. For instance, in As You Like It when Corin, the shepherd, talks of love his lines are beautiful and poetic – but ultimately unrealistic.
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How do you say hello in Romeo and Juliet?

HELLO = = GOODBYE

Good Morrow, Mistress Patterson. Good morning, Mrs. Patterson.
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How do you say your like in Shakespeare?

Shakespeare's Pronouns

The second-person singular (you, your, yours), however, is translated like so: "Thou" for "you" (nominative, as in "Thou hast risen.")
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How does Romeo speak?

Prose in Romeo and Juliet usually marks either comic speech or the speech of low-status characters. The Nurse, Peter and the Musicians usually speak in prose, because they are comic and low-status characters. Mercutio and Romeo mostly use verse, but they often use prose when they are exchanging jokes.
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How to talk like Shakespeare



Did Romeo and Juliet exist?

The two families, Montecchi and Capuleti, actually lived in Verona between the end of the 13th and the beginning of the 14th century. Did they have a son named Romeo and a daughter named Juliet (Giulietta in Italian)?
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How does Shakespeare say good morning?

Good morrow, sweet lord! God dig-you-den all!
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How do you say myself in Shakespearean?

Thou and Thee, You and Ye

Modern English uses only four pronouns for addressing a person or persons: you, your, yourself, and yours. The English of Shakespeare's time used ten pronouns: thou, thee, thy, thyself, thine, ye, you, your, yourself, and yours.
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How do you say my in Old English?

From Middle English mi, my, apocopated form of min, myn, from Old English mīn (“my, mine”), from Proto-West Germanic *mīn, from Proto-Germanic *mīnaz (“my, mine”, pron.)
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What are cool ways to say hello?

We've got your back! There are tons of interesting and creative ways to say hello, and we've compiled the best of the best.
...
Here are a few cute ways to say hello:
  1. "What's good, boo boo?"
  2. "Hey there hot stuff."
  3. "Hi! I like your face."
  4. "Aye baby, how you doin'?"
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What accent is Shakespeare?

Experts have suggested that Shakespeare's accent would have sounded something like Irish, Yorkshire and West Country accents mixed together. Also, they believe that words were spoken much more quickly than in contemporary Shakespeare productions.
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How do you write Shakespearean style?

Shakespeare's unique writing style

William Shakespeare's style of writing evolved out of the conventional style of the time. Highly stylized, Shakespeare wrote in iambic pentameter -- a type of unrhymed meter that contains 10 syllables in each phrase, with each unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable.
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How did Shakespeare's plays sound?

By all those lights, as these excerpts from the British Library Board suggest, Shakespeare's English might have sounded something like a cross between the English of Thomas Hardy and that of James Joyce—not terribly American, that is, but recognizably different from the standard dialect of London today.
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Does thy mean my?

Thy is an old-fashioned, poetic, or religious word for 'your' when you are talking to one person.
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What does Thou thee thy and thine mean?

Thou is the nominative form; the oblique/objective form is thee (functioning as both accusative and dative), the possessive is thy (adjective) or thine (as an adjective before a vowel or as a pronoun) and the reflexive is thyself.
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How do you say goodnight in Shakespeare?

Parting is such sweet sorrow, That I shall say good night till it be morrow.
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How do you say thank you in Shakespeare?

In Shakespeare's day there was a distinction. For example it would make no sense to say "I thank thee" to a group of people. Instead you would have to say "I thank ye" (familiar form) or "I thank you" (polite form).
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What does ye mean in Shakespeare?

ye = you (subject, plural) e.g. "Ye all came forth from the room." thee = you (object... "to you" ) e.g. "I saw thee in the other room." thine or thy = your (possessive, singular) e.g. "That is thy room."
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Why do you touch Juliet's breast?

It is believed that touching her breast brings good luck! The statue was made in 1969 by the sculptor Nereo Costantini and positioned in the courtyard at the initiative of the Lions Club of Verona in 1972.
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How old is Juliet?

In Shakespeare's original story, Romeo is given the age of 16 years and Juliet is given the age of 13 years. The Montague and Capulet families originated in the Divine Comedy by the Italian author Dante Aligheri, rather than in Shakespeare.
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Where is Juliet buried?

Juliet's tomb is a stone sarcophagus, empty and without a lid. It is inside the underground crypt of the church of San Francesco al Corso, an old Franciscan monastery in Verona.
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