Elizabethan English and Shakespearean Vocabulary
Elizabethan English and Shakespearean Vocabulary
Elizabethan English and Shakespearean Vocabulary
One of the primary obstacles between Shakespeares plays and modern audiences is his language. When he
was writing, English was on the cusp of becoming Modern English and leaving Middle English behind. (You
wouldnt recognize Old English, which started to morph into Middle English around 1066.) However, there are a
few holdovers from Middle English still remaining. Because of two bodies of literature Shakespeares works and
the King James Bible, newly translated in 1605 this moment in Englishs development was captured in time, and is
thus referred to as Elizabethan English, after Queen Elizabeth I. Why not Jacobean English, after King James I? I
have no idea.
However, with practice, insight, and Mr. Shanleys awesome handouts, this obstacle can be minimized.
Here are a few lessons.
The same, just shortened
Shakespeare uses a lot of contractions, especially to maintain iambic pentameter:
wi = with
I = In
t = to
t = it
e'en = even (sounds like een)
o = of
tis = it is
e'er = ever (sounds like air)
twas = it was
neer = never (sounds like nair)
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Hey, you!
Fear not thees and thous! They both mean you, and they follow a pattern.
thou = you (subject)
thy = your
thine = yours
ye = you (plural)
To compare this all to Modern English, use the handy chart below.
Subjective
I
you
she
he
it
we
you (all)*
they
who
Objective
me
you
her
him
it
us
you
them
whom
Possessive
(adj)
my
your
her
his
its
our
your
their
whose
Possessive
(pronoun)
mine
yours
hers
his
--ours
yours
theirs
whose
thou
ye
thee
you
thy
yours
thine
yours
Shakespeare doesnt always use the pronouns in the last two lines; since Elizabethan English was changing, he
sometimes used the modern ones instead.
* this is why yall is so useful
Hablamos
(hablas)
Habla
Hablan
To Speak
I speak
You speak
He/she/it
speaks
We speak
You speak
They speak
To Speak
I speak
Thou
speakest
He/she/it
speaketh
We speak
Ye speak
They speak
Conjugating verbs in Modern English is relatively easy, mainly because we changed two of the conjugations. To
conjugate in Elizabethan English,
2nd Person singular verb adds -est, (you give is thou givest)
3rd Person singular verb adds eth (she gives is she giveth)
Here are some examples:
Elizabethan English
thou art
hast
he
is
hath
wilt
will
canst
can
dost
doth
Modern English
you are
have
will
can
do
thou
he
you
speakest
speaketh
speak
liest
lieth
lie
lovest
loveth
love
hadst
had
thinkest
thinketh
think
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The Royal We a king or other royal leader will frequently refer to him/herself as we (our sister, now our
queen our sovereignty), as if the king and the country are one and the same
Kings and other nobility are also sometimes referred to with the name of their country; in Hamlet, the uncle of
Fortinbras, Norways king, is often called Old Norway.
Some characters, especially in the histories, are referred to with several names. Henry Bolingbroke is called
Bolingbroke at first in Richard II; when his father, the Duke of Lancaster, dies, Henry inherits his fathers title
and is sometimes called Lancaster. When he becomes king, he becomes Henry IV.
In families,
the prefix step- and the suffix in-law are often dropped
cousin, aunt, uncle, nephew and niece can be used very broadly
cousin can also be used with a friend or comrade
Shakespearean Vocabulary
a = contraction of have or he
ere = before
apace = quickly
aught = anything
forsooth = truthfully
glass = mirror
engaged to
haste = hurry
bosom = heart
brace = pair
hither = here
corse = corpse
crown = head
sooth = truth
likeness = resemblance
thither = there
naught = nothing
treble = triple
nay = no
oft = often
tut = hmphf
ope = open
twain = two
undone = ruined
owe = own
presently = soon
woe = sadness
sith = since
What light
foot
through yon- der winfoot
foot
dow breaks?
foot
The witches in Macbeth speak in the opposite rhythm, and their lines are shorter, with four feet instead of
five. This is called trochaic tetrameter.
Bubble,
foot
bubble,
foot
toil and
foot
trouble!
foot
Then the witches will switch to iambic tetrameter (8 syllables in 4 feet), just for kicks.
Because this is poetry with a constant meter, this is called verse.
--used by higher class characters and in important moments
Prose is just regular writing, like in a paragraph
--used by lower-class characters, for humor, in idle conversation, and by cynical characters (like
Mercutio and Iago)
Verse usually doesnt rhyme (blank verse).
One line is often split between two speakers, so the 2nd half starts in the middle of the page, away from the
left margin.
This syllable pattern is why Shakespeare often put words in a weird order (i.e., talking backwards) and
used words in new ways.
Sometimes words are skipped (Ill to England).
If theres no punctuation at the end of the line, dont pause!
If theres an accent on the ed at the end of the word, pronounce it as a syllable;
Romeo is banishd is 7 syllables.
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Pronunciation
Glocester = GLAHS-ter
Glocestershire = GLAHS-ter-sher
Worcester = WOOS-ter
Worcestershire = WOOS-ter-sher
Greenwich = GREN-ish (or GREN-ij)
Warwick = WAR-ik
Warwickshire = WAR-ik-sher
***the British rarely pronounce the suffix -shire as SHIRE