I'm not kidding when i say this, but your videos are the only videos that i have found extremely useful. Your quotes are very unique and it's very helpful when you analyse them because most people try to avoid these quotes and go for more of the simpler ones. Thank you so much, you've made the themes so clear and easy to understand!
Fantastic breakdown of all the key ideas behind the play. Thank you very much, and I hope you continue uploading these extremely well made and useful videos.
Thank you. That's very kind of you to say and I'm very pleased you are finding them useful. I am currently writing some new videos and will be releasing them in the coming months.
even five years on students are still watching these videos and finding them useful, i have an exam tomorrow, and if i didnt feel confident before i definitely do now.
Exceptional! I can't thank you enough! Every other teacher spends the whole video talking about what they are going to do and never actually doing it, but you actually get right on with it! Thank you loads :)
when capulet first mentions death lying on her like an untimely rose and then he says in a later quote that death has lain with his future wife, not only is he personifying death but he is also alluding to the fact that Juliet being dead is a lie, she is not really dead but in deep deep slumber, she is metaphorically dead to her name as a capulet but not truly dead.
V0RPAL_SD Good question. She’s drawing a distinction between his lovely outward appearance (flowering face meaning that his face is beautiful like a flower) and the inner reality (emotionally he is treacherous and evil like the snake - the idea of the serpent or snake being deceitful originated from the Bible story of Adam and Eve. Hope that’s useful.
Mehraj. Thank you for asking this question; I'm very pleased that you are interested. I had simplified this number slightly because there are variations (death. death's, deathly etc.) and I had quoted the number of times 'death' and 'dead' were found in a given speech - so I hadn't included all of the times a character had repeated these words in any of those speeches. In fact there are even more than 81 uses. If you want to quote the exact numbers in an exam, the following uses can be found in Romeo: death (69), dead (49). So that's 118 in total. In addition there are mentions of death's (3), deadly (2), death'mark'd (1), death-bed (1) and death-darting (1). In total that then comes to 126 mentions of words relating to death. You can use www.opensourceshakespeare.org as your source. I hope that's useful, thanks again for your interest, and good luck with the exam.
these are so great! is there any chance you could do character analysis for the main characters in this play and an overall analysis of the tragic genre?!
Dr Aidan, has anyone actually gotten a grade 9 from your videos, because they are very good and roughly how many quotes if you were to be tracking the play in an essay would you need?
I'm not kidding when i say this, but your videos are the only videos that i have found extremely useful. Your quotes are very unique and it's very helpful when you analyse them because most people try to avoid these quotes and go for more of the simpler ones. Thank you so much, you've made the themes so clear and easy to understand!
That's very kind of you to say and I'm very pleased that you are finding them useful. Thank you.
Fantastic breakdown of all the key ideas behind the play. Thank you very much, and I hope you continue uploading these extremely well made and useful videos.
Thank you. That's very kind of you to say and I'm very pleased you are finding them useful. I am currently writing some new videos and will be releasing them in the coming months.
❤
even five years on students are still watching these videos and finding them useful, i have an exam tomorrow, and if i didnt feel confident before i definitely do now.
Great to hear. Best of luck.
yeah so true i’m watching this right now the day of my exam 😭😭 best of luck for you today!!
@@oliverkerslake2366 literally same
@@oliverkerslake2366 Same 💀
updateee, i used many of the quotes in the video in my essay, thank you very much :)
exam tommorow and your videos are really helpful thanksss
Jiminah xøx Same I’m unfortunately taking exams🤢
Thank you and I hope the exam goes well.
Same I've got my literature exam tomorrow
Flamebuster 259 lmao this was ages when i commented this, good luck!
@@asmiiiiiiii what did u get for ur gcses?
Exceptional! I can't thank you enough! Every other teacher spends the whole video talking about what they are going to do and never actually doing it, but you actually get right on with it! Thank you loads :)
I'm very pleased to hear this; thank you for letting me know.
Thanks, your videos really helped me for my mock exams for literature. Thank you so much
Very pleased to hear that and thank you for letting me know.
Your videos are so much better than what my teacher teach in school I absolutely love your videos!
Love all the detailed videos, keep up the amazing work, Dr Aidan! 👍🏾
I’m very pleased to hear that you are enjoying the videos and thank you for letting me know.
ahhh i dont even understand romeo and juliet
when capulet first mentions death lying on her like an untimely rose and then he says in a later quote that death has lain with his future wife, not only is he personifying death but he is also alluding to the fact that Juliet being dead is a lie, she is not really dead but in deep deep slumber, she is metaphorically dead to her name as a capulet but not truly dead.
could you please do a video for a Christmas carol too? this video is really helpful, so thank you!
Thank you: I'm glad it was helpful. I will be doing a Christmas Carol video, but unfortunately it won't be ready prior to this year's exam .
got an exam tomorrow and u rly coming in clutch right now
This has made me feel a lot better for my exam tomorrow thank you
i just started revising now
That's good to hear. I hope the exam goes well.
I got my mocks this week and this helped alotttttt
That’s great to hear and thank you for your kind words. I’m very pleased it was helpful and I hope the mocks go very well.
2:44 hi, you made a mistake here. Romeo said it not juliet
Well-spotted: my error. Thank you for letting me know.
Life saver, night before my English power 1 mock exam and in panicking this helps a lot 😰😰😵😵😄😄
Thank you. I'm pleased it was helpful and I hope that your exam went well.
Hope you did well
Love the videos Doc, last minute revision treatment 👍
thank you bro this helped me so much!
Thank you. I’m very pleased to hear that you found it helpful and thanks for letting me know.
What does it mean when Juliet describes Romeo; “O serpent heart, hid with a flowering face!”
V0RPAL_SD Good question. She’s drawing a distinction between his lovely outward appearance (flowering face meaning that his face is beautiful like a flower) and the inner reality (emotionally he is treacherous and evil like the snake - the idea of the serpent or snake being deceitful originated from the Bible story of Adam and Eve. Hope that’s useful.
Was it actually mentioned 81 times, can I write it in my exam paper
Mehraj. Thank you for asking this question; I'm very pleased that you are interested. I had simplified this number slightly because there are variations (death. death's, deathly etc.) and I had quoted the number of times 'death' and 'dead' were found in a given speech - so I hadn't included all of the times a character had repeated these words in any of those speeches. In fact there are even more than 81 uses. If you want to quote the exact numbers in an exam, the following uses can be found in Romeo: death (69), dead (49). So that's 118 in total. In addition there are mentions of death's (3), deadly (2), death'mark'd (1), death-bed (1) and death-darting (1). In total that then comes to 126 mentions of words relating to death. You can use www.opensourceshakespeare.org as your source. I hope that's useful, thanks again for your interest, and good luck with the exam.
@@DrAidan Thank You so much, this was really helpful.
Thank you so much you help me understand the play
Very glad to hear that you found the video helpful.
I wish I could remember all this
Thank you sooo much for this i have my midterm tomorrow and because of corona it's really hard to study but this really helped.
Thank you and I hope that the mid-terms go well.
these are so great! is there any chance you could do character analysis for the main characters in this play and an overall analysis of the tragic genre?!
Thank you; I will add those to the list.
thanks dude
I think at 2:49 the quote is spoken by Romeo, not Juliet.
Well-spotted. My error.
So helpful, could you do inspector calls or Jekyll and Hyde? Thank you so much this helped a lot
Thank you: I am working on themes videos for both of those.
My guy you saved my life for tomorrow's exam
I'm pleased to hear that: glad it was helpful. Hope the exam went well.
Summarize the speaker's views on love and death. Do you agree with these ideas? Explain why or why not. SOMEONE PLEASE HELP ME WITH THIS
If anyone else had the same misunderstanding I did, at 2:45 he says prophetic, not pathetic
Tnx
Dr Aidan, has anyone actually gotten a grade 9 from your videos, because they are very good and roughly how many quotes if you were to be tracking the play in an essay would you need?
Why the “a pair of star crossed lovers their life.” illustrates love?
Can you do the theme of speed plz
Kaylia time*?
Hi There Speed
Stop looking through the comments and get back to revision!
😄 thanks I guess
sorry.
3:10
3:42
6:05
6:51
Amazing!!
So helpful and great as last minute revision
That's good to hear: thank you.
I'm wondering who said the quote then love devouring death do what he dare... you have it as Juliet..but it is Romeo who says it?
yes it’s romeo in act 2 scene 6
You just saved me
This guy is smart
how many quotes do you think we should remember for each theme?
3 hours before my midterm