Quizzes & Puzzles28 mins ago
"Romeo, Romeo, wherefore art thou Romeo?"
Why are these words so commonly misunderstood?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.This is not uncommon, I heard a former cabinet minister on the TV recently use the word 'enormity' as though it meant 'big' rather than 'evil', because that's what it sounds as though it ought to mean. There are lots of other examples.
re pronunciation, bear in mind that they weren't Italians, they were characters in an English play and would be pronounced however an English cast, and audience, wanted them to be. Foreign names are often anglicised - so Roma becomes Rome.
Wherefore barely exists in the English language except in this quote from Shakespeare, and in the phrase 'whys and wherefores'.
i think, given that 'wherefore' is a rarely used word nowadays and 'where' is, that its quite an understandable mistake to make - its pretty obvious why people think this
i myself only found this out when someone i once knew tried to overcasually crowbar it into a conversation, in order for them to sigh and say how they couldn't understand how anyone could misunderstand this phrase, and how it was blatantly obvious what it really meant. it isn't obvious, as i explained to him.
I haven't forgotten to this day though.
it also sounds feasible that she is saying it because she is wanting him to come to her balcony, which he does. You may say yourself "oh john, where are you?" when john is late for a meeting. Without knowing the context, the real meaning makes no sense.
i think its an easy mistake to make for someone who has never studied shakespeare and does not know the story, and has only ever heard these words uttered in jest, or seen them written down.
"...I heard a former cabinet minister on the TV recently use the word 'enormity' as though it meant 'big' rather than 'evil', because that's what it sounds as though it ought to mean. There are lots of other examples."
- 'Enormity' DOES actually mean something of huge size and is commonly accepted as such, it's original meaning is now virtually obsolete even though it might be top of the list when checked in a dictionary, you will find it's alternative meaning is 'something of massive size' among others.
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