Shakespearean Language: A Guide for Actors and StudentsBloomsbury Academic, 2002 - 269 頁 Shakespeare was a master of language, his sayings have become part of everyday speech, and his plays endure, in part, because of the beauty of his verse. Shakespeare's language, however, poses special difficulties for modern actors because many of his words seem unusual or difficult to pronounce, he employs rhetorical devices throughout his works, and he carefully uses rhythm to convey sense. |
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... stressed syl- lable , I'm not sure from what myth of womanhood they received their concept of womanly weakness . The Greeks found the Trochaic beat to be the more graceful and delicate , but also they call a line of trochees a " falling ...
... stressed syllable , are somehow more energetic , more charged than the regular unstressed , stressed , unstressed , stressed pattern of the iamb . And so , when a foot is inverted , it is as if Shakespeare offers the actor a small ...
... stressed syllables is just slightly stronger than the unstressed syllables on either side . Generally speaking , in a five - foot line , there are at most four strongly stressed syllables . Shakespeare was also interested in putting ...