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Why is xxxx doth not a yyyy make considered valid English? Reading doth not a writer make This sounds all wrong so why it is acceptable to use? The word order looks to be all out sequence (Object-Subject-Verb) It should be "reading does not make you a w
meaning - English Language Usage Stack Exchange A very well known quote by William Shakespeare A fool thinks himself to be wise, but a wise man knows himself to be a fool The first half is okay - a fool thinks himself to be wise (he's in that
syntactic analysis - English Language Usage Stack Exchange That's exactly what it means The desires and plans of evil people ("evil will;" "will" in this case being the noun relating to intent and desire) often ("oft") ruin ("mar") the cause of evil That is, the phrase says that evil people are selfish, petty, and short-sighted, and that this quality in evil individuals often impairs the grander world-embracing schemes of capital-E-Evil It's ironic
What is the meaning for the sentence: I trust that age doth not wither . . . age doth not wither nor custom stale my infinite variety is an adaptation of sentence from the play Antony and Cleopatra (ACT II SCENE I ), by William Shakespeare Enobarbus, a friend of Mark Antony, says "Age cannot wither her, nor custom stale Her infinite variety " He is saying that Cleopatra is overwhelmingly attractive to men not so much because of her beauty as because of her
ones chest has straitened, yet he doth not utter Yet his tongue doth not utter (Maybe out of self-esteem, he doesnt want to share in other people with his worries) Imagine your chest is so constricted, when you're distressed you try to breathe deep and what have you He is so full of anguish but still keeps his tongue tied and confines his misery inside and keeps to himself
“Thou doth protest too much”: changed usage? [closed] I remember reading somewhere that the original meaning “thou doth protest too much, methinks” is often used nowadays to take “protest” literally, but this changes its original meaning I can’t see