Insults by Shakespeare

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  • Опубліковано 23 лип 2024
  • "You're a fishmonger!" By taking a closer look at Shakespeare's words--specifically his insults--we see why he is known as a master playwright whose works transcend time and appeal to audiences all over the world.
    Lesson by April Gudenrath, narration by Juliet Blake, animation by TED-Ed.
    View the full lesson: ed.ted.com/lessons/insults-by-...

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,6 тис.

  • @veektorgonzales8009
    @veektorgonzales8009 7 років тому +5034

    "What, you egg?"
    [He stabs him.]

    • @vulfura
      @vulfura 4 роки тому +115

      That must be one of my favorite phrases

    • @nickghaffarian5707
      @nickghaffarian5707 4 роки тому +261

      My favorite line is from romeo and Juliet, when Capulet says:
      You are a saucy boy. Is't so indeed?

    • @theleftuprightatsoldierfield
      @theleftuprightatsoldierfield 4 роки тому +259

      “He has killed me, mother.”
      [dies]

    • @microska2656
      @microska2656 4 роки тому +52

      You are a saucy boy

    • @Crystal23
      @Crystal23 4 роки тому +34

      You're 3 year early for this meme

  • @lucydugdale8787
    @lucydugdale8787 8 років тому +4062

    I would challenge you to a battle of wits, but I see you are unarmed

    • @caterpillow
      @caterpillow 4 роки тому +20

      yeah u wont do it cuz u'll lose

    • @jasleenkaur8887
      @jasleenkaur8887 4 роки тому +64

      I can't believe they skipped Beatrice and Benedict

    • @DrRank
      @DrRank 4 роки тому +85

      I've never heard that one before, but it is now my favourite Shakespeare quote.

    • @arnavrawat9864
      @arnavrawat9864 4 роки тому +7

      Wow REKT

    • @caterpillow
      @caterpillow 4 роки тому

      @@jhosepo1837 ?

  • @miaandrade4122
    @miaandrade4122 8 років тому +3105

    Shall I compare thee to a summer's day? 'Cause thou hast no class.

  • @50TNCSA
    @50TNCSA 8 років тому +4115

    Act IV, Scene II of Titus Andronicus
    Demetrius: "Villain, what hast thou done?"
    Aaron: "That which thou canst not undo."
    Chiron: "Thou hast undone our mother."
    Aaron: "Villain, I have done thy mother."

    • @joshuahadams
      @joshuahadams 8 років тому +659

      Miguel: "You fight like my sister!"
      Tulio: "I fought your sister!"

    • @TDH12
      @TDH12 8 років тому +18

      +50TNCSA XD omg!

    • @charmagne2102
      @charmagne2102 8 років тому +13

      oh my god xD

    • @jim4671
      @jim4671 8 років тому +109

      +50TNCSA This Means He Shrewd Thy Mother? Oh! Thy Wit and Cunning Is Unmatched, Shakespeare!

    • @the07pattyvonne
      @the07pattyvonne 8 років тому +68

      I doth not know thyself for I thought this was incest. xD

  • @smol_chilli_pepper
    @smol_chilli_pepper 8 років тому +2361

    You bite your thumb at me?! The outrage!

    • @alicja_5864
      @alicja_5864 8 років тому +93

      +1210Nique i DO bite my thumb at you, sir!

    • @lochlannkingz5279
      @lochlannkingz5279 8 років тому +8

      I fight too

    • @RowdyPumper
      @RowdyPumper 8 років тому +28

      Imagine Robert Deniro saying, "You talkin' to me?" and you'll get it.

    • @BeepingMetal
      @BeepingMetal 8 років тому +28

      +1210Nique I occasionally physically do this as an insult. People don't know whether to be insulted or not, and while figuring it out, I've shanked them in the kidney.

    • @kingtagao9307
      @kingtagao9307 7 років тому +1

      1210Nique I bite his ass

  • @Dappledvine
    @Dappledvine 10 років тому +1221

    Shakespeare's insults are the best insults. My English class started insulting each other in Shakespeare speak.

  • @iLOVEpicklesBRO28
    @iLOVEpicklesBRO28 9 років тому +2594

    Did you seriously make a vid about shakespearian insults and skip ALL of Mercutio's lines?? That guy was a witty badass!

    • @dominicguye8058
      @dominicguye8058 9 років тому +96

      Nichole Sinclair Yep, he's known as a jokester. I think they wanted to go in depth about a few insults, and leave the viewer curious to look more up themselves. #Mercutio

    • @skynightstars321
      @skynightstars321 9 років тому +4

      Nichole Sinclair Quite literally what I was going to comment on.

    • @firaspotter8556
      @firaspotter8556 7 років тому +1

      Mr. Meeseeks Ikr

    • @egyptjohnson8076
      @egyptjohnson8076 6 років тому +1

      Mr. Meeseeks OMG Thank You !! Right ! I said the same thing lol

    • @fallingcrane1986
      @fallingcrane1986 6 років тому +18

      Perhaps it was ‘cause he was a *grave* man.

  • @Sephajinami
    @Sephajinami 8 років тому +2816

    People cringe when they hear Shakespeare? I usually light up.

    • @rhemorigher
      @rhemorigher 8 років тому +85

      +Kira Suzuki Yeah, kind of my thoughts exactly - I came here because the video was about Shakespeare and yet the very first thing is about how cringe-worthy he is. What the hell?

    • @ducttapeanddreams
      @ducttapeanddreams 8 років тому +36

      +Kira Suzuki
      I cringe about Romeo and Juliette, which I think is his worst play and really is why so many people are turned off by Shakespeare
      But still, what sort of hack insults one of the greatest playwrights in history to start the video. And saying the Montagues and Capulets are /gangs/. What sort of twit is this. Seriously, this is a terrible TED-Ed video

    • @willowjade1907
      @willowjade1907 8 років тому +4

      FINALLY!

    • @Kntrytnt
      @Kntrytnt 8 років тому +11

      +Kira Suzuki I know, right? What kind of fustilarian cringes at Shakespeare?

    • @EliteAwesomeness
      @EliteAwesomeness 8 років тому +13

      +Kntrytnt I only cringe at the mention of Shakespeare in an English class. Other than that, I'm fine with his works.

  • @ellokittyca
    @ellokittyca 7 років тому +430

    My favorite insult is in Mid Summer Nights Dream: "Get lost, you dwarf, you tiny little weed, you scrap, you acorn!"

    • @ultimatebishoujo29
      @ultimatebishoujo29 3 роки тому +4

      I love that one too

    • @carleee4099
      @carleee4099 3 роки тому +5

      It would be Get lost thou dwarf thou tiny little weed, thou scrap, thou acorn!

    • @carleee4099
      @carleee4099 3 роки тому +4

      @José Flores it means they are small, rubbish (useless) and as small as sea weed

    • @preronasengupta163
      @preronasengupta163 2 роки тому +2

      what, you egg?

  • @christopherhalim2801
    @christopherhalim2801 8 років тому +651

    Shakespeare actually helped me quite a lot.
    He helps me to send curses and insults at my friends without them knowing anything XD

  • @aprilblenk
    @aprilblenk 8 років тому +4399

    I'm sorry but who the hell cringes when they hear Shakespeare?

    • @lewisirwin5363
      @lewisirwin5363 7 років тому +209

      I do. English class and Leonardo Dicaprio have a lot to answer for with Shakespeare.

    • @ayahassan9674
      @ayahassan9674 7 років тому +70

      i was just about to ask the same question

    • @darksidecola4529
      @darksidecola4529 7 років тому +191

      aprilblenk I don't cringe I just wonder what is happening

    • @mukundabodapati9222
      @mukundabodapati9222 7 років тому +6

      Sally Williams yeah

    • @nick-fk9sk
      @nick-fk9sk 7 років тому +2

      wolf pack winter it's kind of like you wanna fight cause square up 4:39

  • @kimmy2631
    @kimmy2631 4 роки тому +201

    Can’t believe you didn’t mention the line “Villain, I have done thy mother” from Titus Andronicus. it’s the original yo mama joke.

    • @Jordan__21373
      @Jordan__21373 Місяць тому

      There’s no way😂😂
      😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • @oRitchinal
    @oRitchinal 7 років тому +367

    So basically it means that if you hear an insult in a shakespeare play, it means the characters don't like eachother, what a revelation

    • @Vodka6329
      @Vodka6329 Рік тому +4

      You're god damn right

    • @miholancholy
      @miholancholy 11 місяців тому +3

      Your comment was six years ago, but... I think you have it backwards. Such words were either invented or given a new meaning by Shakespeare--meaning, at that time, you wouldn't immediately know they were insults, but you would INFER that they were, based on the context, such as "the characters not liking each other."
      And I believe it's the process of inferring as you hear it that makes it work, that makes it somehow "a revelation" to the audience. They were probably like, "Hey, that new word combination is actually pretty witty!"

  • @woihjsd
    @woihjsd 8 років тому +460

    I think people cringe at Shakespeare because they make us study it so young. It makes a lot more sense after you've had exposure to life outside a classroom. I find ironic that they teach Shakespeare as young as 12, but you can't watch a PG-13/R movie because of violence and sexual themes..... Shakespeare is all violence and sex themes 0_0
    Funny that Tybalt's death got a spoiler alert but not Romeo and Juliet suicide together. All of those deaths are elemental to the story arc lol :)

    • @MeKsTeR330
      @MeKsTeR330 8 років тому +31

      +Terri Kim Well Shakespeare literally tells you that they are going to die in the first lines of the play, and everyone knows that they will, but not everyone knows Tybalt will.

    • @DPlough
      @DPlough 8 років тому +18

      +Terri Kim I'm pretty sure that everyone in the English speaking world knows that Romeo and Juliet die, but people don't usually know about Tybalt unless they have read or seen the play.

    • @ihategoogle2382
      @ihategoogle2382 8 років тому +12

      +Terri Kim In Denmark, we have to study at least one Shakespeare play in high school (in English, not translated). I personally found that to be a good time to be introduced to Shakespeare. Any earlier would have been too early.

    • @helloworld2848
      @helloworld2848 8 років тому +3

      +MeKsTeR330 I agree, I quote the first scene of this play, "From forth the fatal loins of these two foes, a pair of starcrossed lovers take their life."

    • @Concetta20
      @Concetta20 8 років тому +23

      I think a lot of people cringe because as children they're exposed to Shakespeare via reading his plays like a book and then hearing their classmates, who probably have no idea what they're saying, read it out loud. They should be introduced to Shakespeare as his original audience was, by seeing the play. It's amazing how much more you understand.

  • @Leto85
    @Leto85 8 років тому +461

    When will Facebook finally be updated with a biting thumb thumbnail?

  • @Tobarius
    @Tobarius 10 років тому +730

    This video really makes Shakespeare's insults seem lame.

  • @pocky2896
    @pocky2896 7 років тому +91

    This is just my favorite insult of all time, not to mention by Shakespeare
    "Go thou and fill another room in Hell."

  • @crashsite1576
    @crashsite1576 4 роки тому +84

    "Saucy boy" is my favourite insult from Shakespeare

    • @cm5061
      @cm5061 3 роки тому +2

      what, you egg?
      [he stabs him]

  • @shuichikina
    @shuichikina 4 роки тому +56

    "You are a saucy boy."
    "What, you egg?"
    [He stabs him.]

  • @PopTartNeko
    @PopTartNeko 7 років тому +214

    i fall asleep at thine humor!

  • @Lionbug
    @Lionbug 8 років тому +211

    I am a Fishmonger and I am offended.

    • @nicolesong6199
      @nicolesong6199 8 років тому +9

      +Lion Reichelt Offended am I and I am fishmonger.

    • @nicolesong6199
      @nicolesong6199 8 років тому

      ***** ooooooooh. so like a butcher.

    • @nicolesong6199
      @nicolesong6199 8 років тому +1

      ***** that doesn't quite make sense.

    • @nicolesong6199
      @nicolesong6199 8 років тому

      ***** aaaaahhh. that's great.

    • @andrewzhu5394
      @andrewzhu5394 5 років тому

      @@nicolesong6199 Bites my thumb

  • @kevinkraft6804
    @kevinkraft6804 8 років тому +831

    Who cringes at Shakespeare? "why is he so popular?" - What a terrible way to start.

    • @HisMajesty.
      @HisMajesty. 8 років тому +7

      Lol

    • @2rhine
      @2rhine 7 років тому +9

      Kevin Maguire exactly

    • @JazzyNym
      @JazzyNym 7 років тому +58

      What a terrible comment. There are literally millions--possibly billions of people who go their entire lives hating/never understanding Shakespeare. It's clearly targeted for those people.

    • @flyguyry1
      @flyguyry1 7 років тому +3

      JazzyNym which is exactly who its for.

    • @user-ub8oi7oh3r
      @user-ub8oi7oh3r 5 років тому +7

      Americans without an education

  • @georgiion1684
    @georgiion1684 7 років тому +54

    i'm probably going to bite my thumb the next time i want to insult someone without them knowing.

  • @albertgainsworth
    @albertgainsworth 6 років тому +22

    I like "No Fear Shakespeare" and "Shakespeare Made Easy." In both cases, the original Shakespeare's lines are on one page and a modern translation on the other. It surprised me that the modern translation is very good literature too. Anyway, if you find Shakespeare difficult to understand, these books are a great help.

  • @shaneturner500
    @shaneturner500 7 років тому +16

    "do you flip the bird at me, sir?"
    "well, I flip the bird!"

    • @cm5061
      @cm5061 3 роки тому +4

      "but do you flip the bird at _me_ , sir?"
      [quietly] "uhhh frick is the law on our side if i say yes?"

  • @charmagne2102
    @charmagne2102 8 років тому +50

    My favorite insults are from "Much Ado About Nothing" especially the insults between Beatrice and Benedict. XP

  • @MadhuNTHBetterToDo
    @MadhuNTHBetterToDo 9 років тому +77

    biting the thumb in those times were the equivalent of flipping off someone today.
    And also, the example of insults in Romeo And Juliet wasn't that of a good one. Clearly, Mercutio's ones should have been illustrated, those were the real scenes that made the audiences, both back then and now, laugh.
    A scene i really enjoyed would be the Nurse coming to find Romeo and meeting with Mercutio and Benvolio instead.

  • @brintesiacirce9414
    @brintesiacirce9414 7 років тому +182

    honey, a suggestion, if we are watching a Shakespeare video it's because we like him, don't start it by saying he's boring or "strangely" popular

  • @BeepingMetal
    @BeepingMetal 8 років тому +20

    'But is he truly using Fishmonger as an insult? Or is it that Hamlet is genuinely mad?' - Every performing arts teacher ever

  • @prettyme4387
    @prettyme4387 7 років тому +10

    My favorite insults are in a midsummer nights dream! The way Lysander speaks to Hermia, the way Demetrius speaks to Helena, and the way Lysander speaks to Demetrius

  • @shubhdeepkaur7948
    @shubhdeepkaur7948 7 років тому +15

    "Do thou amend thy face,
    and I'll amend my life."
    Henry IV, Part 1: Act 3, Scene 3.

  • @nicholaswieczorek4971
    @nicholaswieczorek4971 8 років тому +41

    So Shakespeare is the diss king?

  • @narutoandanimefa
    @narutoandanimefa 8 років тому +79

    0:15 "Why do we cringe when we hear 'Shakespeare'?". Well, I don't - and I know for a fact many don't.
    Seen enough of this video. Next.

    • @datdeerdude5139
      @datdeerdude5139 8 років тому +5

      +Carmela Pedinni Personally, I don't like Shakespeare, but i definitely don't cringe at his name. Now I don't mean to start an argument with you so please note that I do respect Shakespeare for a brilliant writer of his time, but not in today's standards.

    • @narutoandanimefa
      @narutoandanimefa 8 років тому +8

      dinoshar! dinoshar! Don't worry, I don't come to UA-cam to hate on people's view of the world. I undersant that many don't like him, and that is OK. The world goes round because we like different things, and that's absolutely great. I just think it's wrong on the video's part to generalize people and assume (or lead us to believe) that they think everyone cringes at his mention. To which I said I know many don't, but of course that means that some do too - and that's fine by me, so long as those aren't classified as "everybody". (:

    • @RowdyPumper
      @RowdyPumper 8 років тому +1

      You make an interesting point about today's standards: how would memorably imaginative, clever, and unique exaltation of language ever compare with our rap lyrics or blockbuster dialogue.

    • @frostythechimneysweep8594
      @frostythechimneysweep8594 8 років тому +2

      +RowdyPumper Or our scintillating online text exchanges...

  • @noncounterproductive4596
    @noncounterproductive4596 7 років тому +36

    A classicist would tell you that the word is pronounced hamarTEEa, not "hamarsha." Hamartia in Ancient Greek means error.

    • @elvinmeng4905
      @elvinmeng4905 7 років тому +3

      so you're also gonna pronounce psyche "pxi-e"? I studied the classics myself but also literary criticism, and harmatia is one of many terms (like katharsis) that have been used in criticism so often it started developing a new meaning on its own, in particular, the tragic mistake. That particular meaning came straight from Poetics.

    • @noncounterproductive4596
      @noncounterproductive4596 7 років тому +1

      Elvin Meng No, and I can't even make sense out of your attempt at a phonetic spelling anyway.
      Psyche is a bit different from hamartia because psyche has made its way into daily usage and the mispronunciation is standardized. Hamartia is still a foreign word in English. If you check the pronunciation with an online dictionary it will tell you to pronounce it as an Ancient Greek word, precisely as I stated. www.google.com/#q=Hamartia+definition

    • @FarhatC28
      @FarhatC28 7 років тому +6

      Well that's ironic.

  • @phookadude
    @phookadude 12 років тому +16

    Hamlet is hilarious, nearly every line he has is an insult, usually right to the person's face.

  • @markblaze10
    @markblaze10 10 років тому +57

    I never cringed at Shakespeare. I don't see why anyone would.

    • @markblaze10
      @markblaze10 9 років тому +2

      Matt Vajgrt I get goose bumps if it is a good performance if that counts at all.

    • @aur9035
      @aur9035 2 роки тому

      Uncultured swines would 😊 they dont want to admit they dont understand anything thus finding it hard to appreciate something (in this case, a form of speech) that they're not used to.

    • @simple-sandwich9957
      @simple-sandwich9957 2 роки тому

      I was ten when u made this comment. Now I'm feeling cringey, wow am I living the past ?

    • @markblaze10
      @markblaze10 2 роки тому

      @@simple-sandwich9957 Thanks for bringing me back. Now I have to cringe at myself.

  • @christinehancock5995
    @christinehancock5995 8 років тому +67

    I've never had a problem understanding Shakespeare's wording. I occasionally have to Google a definition if I can't determine a meaning from context, but otherwise it's pretty straightforward stuff. However, I was taught to read from the King James Bible and to understand that style of language from the time I was six, so Shakespeare was a walk in the park for me as a high schooler studying Hamlet, Romeo and Juliet, and Much Ado About Nothing.
    Sometimes I get upset with myself because I think I am just a monolingual American; then I realize most Americans can't interpret English scripture, or Shakespeare, or the Founding Documents; and suddenly I don't so stupid and uneducated after all.

    • @Concetta20
      @Concetta20 8 років тому +5

      Ditto to that, my friend. Ditto.

    • @yeeshinwoon6867
      @yeeshinwoon6867 7 років тому +5

      same! I've been reading the KJV for as long as i can remember so when we did Macbeth in class i fell asleep when the teacher was still explaining how to understand the english.

  • @AislinneG
    @AislinneG 12 років тому +18

    Hamlet-- Fishmonger makes even more sense when you realize that in Elizabethan times, a nunnery was a slang term for a brothel. So when Hamlet tells Ophelia to "Get the to a nunnery." he is not suggesting she become a nun. and then he turns around and calls her father a pimp.

  • @pritivishwakarma6186
    @pritivishwakarma6186 6 років тому +1

    Mood atmosphere and relationships are all the best things you need for a play

  • @aperson22222
    @aperson22222 8 років тому +90

    Who's the intended audience of this video? Less than a minute in, I already feel my intelligence has been insulted.

  • @wanketta
    @wanketta 8 років тому +12

    In Tybalt's very first sentence, he utters a threat, an insult, and a pun! Tybalt is trying to provoke Benvolio into fighting by calling the Montagues "heartless hinds." On the surface, "heartless hinds" simply means "timid servants" (an insult in itself); however, if one looks closer and discovers the etymology of the word "hart" and "hind," one discovers an even deeper grating comment in Tybalt's pun. The word "heart" is a play on the word "hart" which means "a male deer." The word "hind" in addition to meaning "servant" can also mean "a female deer." Therefore, Tybalt is basically throwing the ultimate insult at the Montagues in that Tybalt is insulting their manhood: "What, art thou drawn among these man-less women?

    • @Concetta20
      @Concetta20 8 років тому +2

      Yeah, I found this analysis of Shakespearian insults quite lacking, although the explanation behind the fishmonger insult was news to me (although I already knew what a fishmonger was). I mean, if you know what "war-monger" means you can put two and two together.

    • @annag6400
      @annag6400 6 років тому

      You've literally gone and *copy and pasted this whole comment* from *Bret Doc Culpepper's* comment that is two years older than your comment. So you copied someone and now you're getting credit for *his* comment. 😡 not cool

  • @the07pattyvonne
    @the07pattyvonne 8 років тому +6

    You know what, instead of listening and watching the video, I go down to read the comments and give myself entertainment xD

  • @cruelfish4824
    @cruelfish4824 8 років тому +20

    Fish only smells bad if it is rotten.

    • @basmahshoaib5213
      @basmahshoaib5213 8 років тому +2

      naa

    • @jizzfudgsickle3619
      @jizzfudgsickle3619 7 років тому

      'Tis well thou art not fish!

    • @erischama1922
      @erischama1922 7 років тому

      Then you haven't smelled the horrible smell when you're cutting up a fish. It's like the smell of coins, blood and rust all combined, only much much stronger.

  • @catcubus
    @catcubus 12 років тому +5

    I love videos like this because in such a short amount of time, you learn something new and it's presented in an entertaining enough manner that you want to keep watching. I HATED reading Halmet in High School. It was so boring. But this video gives me a bit more respect for Shakespeare, I must admit.

  • @B612nian
    @B612nian 10 років тому +9

    From Daria - "At age six, I decide I don't need to talk to other kids ever again; my parents are the ones who get called into school. At 12, I decide to try out some Shakespearean insults on my teachers; my parents are the ones who get called into school. At 15, I start writing violent revenge fantasies just to get a reaction... "

  • @dontbelieveinez
    @dontbelieveinez 2 роки тому +5

    'Thou painted maypole' (what hermia calls helena in amnd) has got to be one of my favourites. not only is it calling helena obnoxiously tall as hermia often gets mocked for being short but its also implying that helena thinks the whole world revolves around her

  • @adzug
    @adzug 12 років тому +1

    this video taught me that nothing kills a joke or insult more than explaining why its funny or an insult.

  • @unamed2516
    @unamed2516 7 років тому +4

    I never cringe when I hear Shakespeare even if I get a little confused but I don't care I love words, especially his.

  • @inkypink
    @inkypink 7 років тому +4

    This video cracks me up because it basically translates Shakespeare's witty humor into today's slang

  • @theshatteredending
    @theshatteredending 12 років тому

    Wonderful interpretations! The thumb biting really intrigued me!

  • @TurtleBrownie
    @TurtleBrownie 7 років тому +3

    My favourite line in the Shakespeare playwright Macbeth, is when the murderer stabs a character and says "what, you egg?"

  • @hankschannel
    @hankschannel 12 років тому +11

    She's from England...not all British people sound the same.

  • @genesisproject1908
    @genesisproject1908 12 років тому +3

    My favorite of Shakespeare's insults is that one play where the villain calls mankind a miserable pile of secrets.

  • @paper3993
    @paper3993 4 роки тому +1

    I could like a full video about each and every insults by Shakespeare

  • @gammagammamoomoo
    @gammagammamoomoo 12 років тому +1

    i watched ALL of THAT.... someone needs to give me a gold star.

  • @hedvikarackova3138
    @hedvikarackova3138 7 років тому +8

    My favourite Shakespeare's quote (and insult) is "What, you egg?"...so poetic

  • @heyitzrane3025
    @heyitzrane3025 6 років тому +3

    "Do you show that finger at me, sir?"
    "Yes, I do show that finger at you, sir."
    "Do you show that finger at 𝘮𝘦, sir?"

  • @olamohammed8609
    @olamohammed8609 2 роки тому +1

    A normal person:
    Mom I'm hungry
    Shakespeare:
    let it be clear to the birth giver that my stomach is made of nothing

  • @RogueWarrior869
    @RogueWarrior869 12 років тому

    It's ages old. It goes back even farther than that.

  • @koyaTHEEkoala
    @koyaTHEEkoala 4 роки тому +7

    I shall bite my thumb at my English teacher and see how she reacts.

  • @mollyedmonds5323
    @mollyedmonds5323 7 років тому +5

    Did you know that Shakespeare invented the word swag.

  • @storiesforyou97
    @storiesforyou97 7 років тому

    you people are doing a fabulous work i love this channel

  • @Hybris51129
    @Hybris51129 12 років тому +2

    0:42-0:50 "I'm not dead yet!" "You'll be dead in a moment." LOL

  • @princessmj15hyrule
    @princessmj15hyrule 8 років тому +12

    Shakespeare is not that uninteresting to today's youth. I would be happy if we got to read Shakespeare in my class even if I have read a great number of his works already for fun. I have never once cringed when reading Shakespeare and I would prefer his words to that of modern translations.

  • @annalisaa4029
    @annalisaa4029 8 років тому +354

    I've never watched such a boring video about insults :-P

    • @thingonometry-1460
      @thingonometry-1460 8 років тому +30

      Ive never watched such a boring insult about a vide #REKT #420NOSCOPE

    • @annalisaa4029
      @annalisaa4029 8 років тому +5

      +Thingonometry - Ahahah right!

    • @Kostantinho
      @Kostantinho 8 років тому +7

      +Thingonometry - I've never watched such a boring reply to boring insult about a video. HA HAAAAAA I can tang my triumph, Bedswerver!

    • @vision716
      @vision716 8 років тому +7

      I've never seen such a boring comment section.

    • @mamakazooie788
      @mamakazooie788 8 років тому +3

      +Thingonometry - ... But how do you watch an insult?

  • @lunab.3139
    @lunab.3139 12 років тому

    I subscribed a few videos ago and I'm NOT disappointed!
    I learn things and not fall asleep from boredom!

  • @alize0623
    @alize0623 12 років тому

    I'm SO using these in school!

  • @gabriel300010
    @gabriel300010 7 років тому +4

    "they really are trying to tell you something" NOOOOOO YOU DONT SAY

  • @medelinejayasaputra2852
    @medelinejayasaputra2852 8 років тому +4

    How we insult people in the past:
    Thou dare biting thumbs at I,
    such a heartless hind thou art
    Thou art mere fishmonger
    lol ;)

  • @TwistedFireX
    @TwistedFireX 12 років тому

    For some reason I wish this was longer.

  • @Thesmokeeffect
    @Thesmokeeffect Рік тому

    I love the old and longer Ted Ed intro

  • @SkyeID
    @SkyeID 8 років тому +11

    "words are very unnecessary.." thumbs up if you know the song reference

    • @wingracer1614
      @wingracer1614 8 років тому +3

      +Skye ID That's because "they can only do harm."

  • @vanessavlogs3185
    @vanessavlogs3185 7 років тому +21

    Is it late that I'm going to read Romeo &juliet in 9th grade ?

    • @TheOnlyGHero09
      @TheOnlyGHero09 7 років тому +16

      no that's normal

    • @TacuG16
      @TacuG16 7 років тому

      snow white i taught some grade 9 romeo and juliet last week

    • @quack2390
      @quack2390 7 років тому

      Chingying V. Li I dont know

    • @serenityrahn5656
      @serenityrahn5656 5 років тому

      sounds about right to me

  • @itslilyquinn
    @itslilyquinn 4 роки тому +1

    "Tallow-faced" and "harpy" are the best well-known that I remember. As well as "bite my thumb" being the equivalent to the middle finger.

  • @aerolchristopherinfante
    @aerolchristopherinfante 5 років тому +1

    The past few weeks, I'm beginning to be addicted in Shakespeare.

  • @kronk5866
    @kronk5866 8 років тому +23

    Narration by Juliet Blake.... illuminati confirmed.

    • @kewl-asian
      @kewl-asian 8 років тому

      why?

    • @kewl-asian
      @kewl-asian 8 років тому

      that doesn't really explain anything to me

    • @moonienoire
      @moonienoire 8 років тому

      +Austin Stoddard Oh, I'm the only one who thought this was a reference to William Blake?

    • @kronk5866
      @kronk5866 8 років тому +5

      +Fatima Ammar Juliet Capulet + William Blake = Juliet Blake

    • @moonienoire
      @moonienoire 8 років тому

      Austin Stoddard Quirky xD

  • @02inthefranxx
    @02inthefranxx 3 роки тому

    Thanks, Ted-Ed, after watching this video, my class is saying Shakespeare insults at each other all day now

  • @abbey2421
    @abbey2421 9 років тому

    Great animations!

  • @niBBunn
    @niBBunn 7 років тому +4

    You are a saucy boy

  • @blockhead134
    @blockhead134 7 років тому +4

    "Biting your tumb" was actually a term that Shakespeare tried to make a thing. And failed.

  • @abhishekdatta4019
    @abhishekdatta4019 3 роки тому

    Idk why but I love reading the comments in TedEd videos

  • @catofculture8562
    @catofculture8562 2 роки тому +2

    [Capulet]
    You are a saucy boy

  • @jonathangayfag
    @jonathangayfag 12 років тому +3

    i remember first reading shakespear.. it's actually not as scary as it seems.. i didnt understood alot of it, but most people forget this stuff was written centuries ago. of course people talked differently. they used words that we no longer use, and on top of that, had a vocabulary practically ten times smaller then the average american.
    once you learn some of the slang, and some of the actions they do that signify something, its actually not very hard to understand

  • @nikgarus3709
    @nikgarus3709 10 років тому +13

    These lessons sound more like Captain Obvious to me. (that's an insult. in case you didn't get it)

  • @silverolympian6213
    @silverolympian6213 8 років тому

    A Midsummer Night's Dream has the best insults ever I think: "You juggler, you cankerblossom! You thief of love!"

  • @DaBezzzz
    @DaBezzzz 4 роки тому +1

    "Shakespeare does use a lot of words"
    -ted-ed, 2012

  • @inhumanash1326
    @inhumanash1326 7 років тому +3

    Fishmonger means someone who sells fish.

    • @serenityrahn5656
      @serenityrahn5656 5 років тому

      thanks for the clarification ... and here i always thought it was someone who mongers fish for a living

  • @StarrTheWitch
    @StarrTheWitch 7 років тому +4

    Someone from now timetravels and has a nervous tick and gets themself killed

  • @drfreudsmom
    @drfreudsmom 4 роки тому +1

    Man: *Bites his thumb*
    Shakespeare: Looks like it is time to be....
    *tRiGgErEd*

  • @anikaj5257
    @anikaj5257 7 років тому

    "Strumpet!" From Othello Ahahaha such a funny word

  • @whajksmwmsjshs
    @whajksmwmsjshs 7 років тому +6

    Shakespeare is savage af

  • @HighLighterlines
    @HighLighterlines 9 років тому +5

    I bite my thumb at thy, sir

    • @Agent1W
      @Agent1W 8 років тому +10

      +HighLighterlines Dost thou inflict to thee hurt at mine expense? Befitting just as a morn's dervish, madness of loons methinks!

    • @Zajin13
      @Zajin13 8 років тому +4

      +Agent1W How dare thou, adressing mine liege lord in such manner? Be gone foul caitiff, before hé sendeth his hounds, bursting with venom, through the night and to thine home. For mark my words, if the time cometh when mine patience is gone and by thine staying had been made all for naught, those beast animals were the smallest part of thine straits.
      Truly, such manners are only known to those which giveth not 2 ducats on thine mothers grave!

  • @Bandgeek12XP
    @Bandgeek12XP 12 років тому +1

    Get thee to a nunnery!
    One of my favorite quotes from Hamlet.

  • @agathaking4255
    @agathaking4255 7 років тому +2

    i wanna see a Shakespear roasting competition now

  • @shafwandito4724
    @shafwandito4724 7 років тому +3

    I'm not native English speakers... what is Thy and Thee? what's the difference?

    • @carlosfedericogimenez5081
      @carlosfedericogimenez5081 7 років тому

      Shafwan Dito I think thy is the formal version of you and thee is the informal one or vice versa my mother language is Spanish but I'm sure it was something like that

    • @saarah0006
      @saarah0006 7 років тому +1

      Shafwan Dito honestly you dont need to know as those people stopped using thy and thee in everyday speech centuries ago

    • @shafwandito4724
      @shafwandito4724 7 років тому

      saarah0006 but Thee and thy is still in UK national anthem

    • @saarah0006
      @saarah0006 7 років тому

      true thats why I said everyday speech

    • @shafwandito4724
      @shafwandito4724 7 років тому

      saarah0006 BUT WHAT ARE THE MEANING?

  • @mishka2892
    @mishka2892 7 років тому +9

    Dost thou even hoist, brethren?

    • @lordweebus4367
      @lordweebus4367 7 років тому

      Mishka dost THOU even hoist, brethren?

    • @mishka2892
      @mishka2892 7 років тому

      Bloody Rose '^' ...that's what I said

    • @Faren_
      @Faren_ 7 років тому

      Mishka Do you even lift, bro?

    • @mishka2892
      @mishka2892 7 років тому

      good SUCC Not really....

  • @SethraLaVode
    @SethraLaVode 6 років тому +1

    My personal favorite from Romeo and Juliet was Lord Capulet calling Tybalt a saucy boy.

  • @zengo6011
    @zengo6011 11 років тому

    Except that is the beauty of words and hidden meanings.

  • @hankreardenfan1019
    @hankreardenfan1019 8 років тому +6

    Cut is another insult. Antonio from the Merchant of Venice (he is the merchant) uses that term against Shylock because he is a Jew.

  • @alexneal9207
    @alexneal9207 8 років тому +4

    ...I thought everybody loved Shakespeare