posted
In this thread we dost speak only in elde angle. Or old english for those of thee who doth not know the phrase of elde angle. As mine mentors wouldst say, "Partyst Onyst Wayne, Partyst Onst Garth"
For soothe thou must speak anon.
Rhaegar
[ January 12, 2004, 08:01 PM: Message edited by: Rhaegar The Fool ]
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"Whan that Aprill, with his shoures soote The droghte of March hath perced to the roote And bathed every veyne in swich licour, Of which vertu engendred is the flour..."
quote: Chaucer is great fun to read for several reasons, among them: (1) he reflects (and helped define) many of the intellectual assumptions of his day, and so helped create the culture which we have in part inherited from him and his contemporaries; (2) he is a delight to read on a sensuous level because of his great sense of verbal play. I know of no other writer who merges as well as Chaucer does a sense of the profound with a sense of play.
quote: I HATE CHAUCER. I've been focusing my life around his writings lately, and I want him to die (again). I don't know why it matters if the Woman of Bath has red socks or not, who cares?! And the rhyming, oh don't even get me started.
So the reviews seem mixed.
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posted
Rhaegar, part of the problem is that your grammar is TERRIBLE. It's like medieval movie English as interpreted by Bill and Ted.
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posted
There is something mildly strange about the same guy haveing large and even staring rolls in, Bill and Ted, Much Ado About Nothing, Speed, and The Matrix.
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In the imperative mood, the -est ending drops off. And it only belongs on second person singular verbs in the present indicative, not on prepositions.
quote:Swa mec gelome laðgeteonan þreatedon þearle. Ic him þenode deoran sweorde, swa hit gedefe wæs.
"Thus often the enemies vigorously pursued me. I extended(?) to them the dear sword, as it was befitting." It's a little rough, but I think it works. No dirty Old English limericks here, dkw.
[ January 13, 2004, 12:16 PM: Message edited by: Jon Boy ]
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posted
Alas! I fear I killed the thread with too much grammar and history. Rest in peace, poor thread.
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posted
No, I killed it, you resurrected it into zombie status, and now I'm plunging a silver spike into its heart. Die, thread.
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posted
Well, personally, I was just waiting for you to show up and post something like that Jon Boy. I was delighted with your post, honestly. I've been meaning to start a thread to ask you something about Shetland dialect (although exactly what, I can't quite remember right now). Are you familiar with it?
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posted
Oh, come on. My philological rantings obviously did it in. Your lame attempt at a Papa Moose–ism merely beat an already dead horse. Now the thread is a grotesque parody of life, a tortured being caught between the world of the living and the world of the dead, just like the Witch King of Angmar. And we all know how the Witch King died, right? He was killed by Eowyn, whose name comes from Old English. Coincidence? I think not.
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posted
Thanks, Noemon. Unfortunately, I'm not familiar with the Shetland dialect. If you remember your question, maybe I can ask my professor tomorrow.
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posted
Oh, I remember. I found a list of words from the Shetland dialect the other day, and found them fascinating. You could see how some of them were cognates of their modern Standard English equivalents, and many of them just sounded really cool. There were a couple of words that were defined as being "sea names" for this or that. Specifically, "anklovan, sea-name for fire-tongs", and "voaler, a sea name for the cat". What is meant by "sea name"? Of course, I could probably just google and find out, but if you knew off the top you your head I was going to take the easy way out and just learn it from you.
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posted
So if you've used your anklovan to pick up the voaler, you might get cited for animal abuse under admiralty law.
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posted
I bought an atlas of world languages the other day. When I get home tonight I'll see if it has any information on the Shetland dialect. I suspect that that's a bit too specific to be included in something as general as that atlas though.
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posted
yeah, uhhh rhaegar i hate to break it to you but there's DEFINITELY a big difference between "old english" and...shall we say "shakespearean english"...if you're so smart maybe you should start an elvish thread? that's probably closer to what you know considering you're basically fluent...
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posted
Oh, and I was told in one of my theater classes that all of Shakespeare was writting in modern English, just with slightly different slang and terminology.
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posted
There'll be no more govoreeting in anything but Nadsat, me droogies. Or it's a right horrorshow tolchok in the litsos for you.
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