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A Dictionary of Shakespearean Terms
A Dictionary of Shakespearean Terms
A Dictionary of Shakespearean Terms
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A Dictionary of Shakespearean Terms

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William Shakespeare used very rich and colorful language in his works, but many of those words and terms are outdated and cannot be found in modern dictionaries. William Shakespeare's works sometimes appears to have a language of its own.

Indeed, William Shakespeare did in fact invent many of the words that he used and these are documented in this Dictionary of Shakespearean Terms. Inventing new words to the English language seems to be a definite objective for Shakespeare! The words coined by Shakespeare are explained with their full origins and meanings.

Shakespeare translations and understanding the real meanings behind some of the Shakespeare language in the great plays and sonnets can be difficult. And this is hardly surprising when the expressions and their meanings have been obsolete since the Elizabethan era!

William Shakespeare was not born to the nobility and his Elizabethan education was quite basic as he left school at the age of 13 and never attended University. Neither of his parents could read or write - a dictionary was not that important during the era! Yet his vocabulary was massive for a man of his background.
A total of 15,000 different words were used in his plays and a further 7000 were used in his poems and sonnets. This gave him a vocabulary of 21,000 words when the average vocabulary of the day in Stratford, England, was less than 500. Even by today's standards, the most celebrated authors do not exceed an average of 7500 words (The poet, John Milton was an exception and his totaled about 8000) and the average English speaking person only has about 2,000 words in their vocabulary. For a person with a University degree this range in vocabulary would rise to about 3000 to 4000.

This is the only dictionary which has been composed in such a simple way that even a layman can easily find the meaning of any Shakespearean term.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherRaja Sharma
Release dateJun 7, 2011
ISBN9781458196385
A Dictionary of Shakespearean Terms
Author

Raja Sharma

Raja Sharma is a retired college lecturer.He has taught English Literature to University students for more than two decades.His students are scattered all over the world, and it is noticeable that he is in contact with more than ninety thousand of his students.

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    Book preview

    A Dictionary of Shakespearean Terms - Raja Sharma

    A Dictionary of Shakespearean Terms

    By Raja Sharma

    www.smashwords.com

    Copyright

    Copyright 2011@ Raja Sharma

    Smashwords Edition

    All rights reserved

    Table of Content

    A Dictionary of Shakespearean Terms

    Copyright

    Table of Content

    Preface

    A

    B

    C

    D

    E

    F

    G

    H

    I

    J

    K

    L

    M

    N

    O

    P

    Q

    R

    S

    T

    U

    V

    W

    X

    Y

    Z

    Preface

    William Shakespeare used very rich and colorful language in his works, but many of those words and terms are outdated and cannot be found in modern dictionaries. William Shakespeare's works sometimes appear to have a language of their own.

    Indeed, William Shakespeare did in fact invent many of the words that he used, and these are documented in this Dictionary of Shakespearean Terms.

    Inventing new words for the English language seems to be a definite objective for Shakespeare! The words coined by Shakespeare are explained with their full origins and meanings.

    It can be difficult to understand the real meanings behind some of the Shakespeare language in the great plays and sonnets. And this is hardly surprising when the expressions and their meanings have been obsolete since the Elizabethan era!

    William Shakespeare was not born to the nobility and his Elizabethan education was quite basic as he left school at the age of 13 and never attended University. Neither of his parents could read nor write.

    A dictionary was not that important during the era! Yet his vocabulary was massive for a man of his background.

    A total of 15,000 different words were used in his plays and a further 7000 were used in his poems and sonnets. This gave him a vocabulary of 21,000 words when the average vocabulary of the day in Stratford, England, was less than 500. Even by today's standards, the most celebrated authors do not exceed an average of 7500 words (The poet, John Milton was an exception and his totaled about 8000) and the average English speaking person only has about 2,000 words in their vocabulary. For a person with a University degree this range in vocabulary would rise to about 3000 to 4000.

    This is the only dictionary which has been composed in such a simple way that even a layman can easily find the meaning of any Shakespearean term.

    Students’ Academy

    A

    ABATE

    to shorten, to cast down, to blunt

    ABATEMENT

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