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Topic: I just noticed something funny about the English language.
Kait
has made another completely pointless and off-topic post that nobody cares about
posted 04-14-2005 05:40:46 PM
We seem to go back and forth on the meaning of our words all the time. I mean, look at "you," for instance. Originally, it was "thee" or "thou" for a single person, and "you" for multiple persons (at least I think that's how it goes, my Olde Englishe 101 is a little rusty since High School). Then we dropped thee, thou, thine, thence, all that other stuff, but kept "you" as both the word for singular and plural. Yet in contemporary times, at least where I'm from, no one ever says "you" to a group of people unless they're somehow superior to the other people (such as a politician giving a speech, etc.). I mean, when was the last time you were in a room with your friends and you said something like, "You wanna get dinner?" Not "You guys," not "Guys, you..." or even "Y'all," just plain old "you?"

Or maybe I'm the only person to experience that....

"A black cat dropped soundlessly from a high wall, like a spoonful of dark treacle and melted under the gate."
-Elizabeth Lemarchand
Liam
Swims in Erotic Circles
posted 04-14-2005 05:41:46 PM
I use 'you' like that all the time.
Blackened
posted 04-14-2005 05:51:07 PM
I fail to see the relevance of this discoverythought.

Although my distaste for you as a human being is brobdingnagian,
what I'm about to do isn't personal.
nem-x
posted 04-14-2005 05:52:53 PM
Kait
has made another completely pointless and off-topic post that nobody cares about
posted 04-14-2005 05:53:43 PM
quote:
nem-x had this to say about the Spice Girls:
I hate you.


"A black cat dropped soundlessly from a high wall, like a spoonful of dark treacle and melted under the gate."
-Elizabeth Lemarchand
Anklebiter
Pancake
posted 04-14-2005 06:34:07 PM
'thee' and 'thou' is not "old english." It is Elizabethian Era english, which is modern.

Anklebiter fucked around with this message on 04-14-2005 at 06:34 PM.

Mr. Parcelan
posted 04-14-2005 06:34:43 PM
I HATE YOU, TOO

Mr. Parcelan fucked around with this message on 04-14-2005 at 06:34 PM.

Bloodsage
Heart Attack
posted 04-14-2005 06:43:02 PM
quote:
Channeling the spirit of Sherlock Holmes, Anklebiter absently fondled Watson and proclaimed:
'thee' and 'thou' is not "old english." It is Elizabethian Era english, which is modern.

Damn you for stealing my line!

I stab at thee from my hotel room in California!

Old English would be completely unintelligible to modern speakers.

To reign is worth ambition, though in Hell:
Better to reign in Hell than serve in Heaven.

--Satan, quoted by John Milton

Kait
has made another completely pointless and off-topic post that nobody cares about
posted 04-14-2005 06:46:06 PM
quote:
Everyone wondered WTF when Bloodsage wrote:
Damn you for stealing my line!

I stab at thee from my hotel room in California!

Old English would be completely unintelligible to modern speakers.


Oh...I'm sorry. So it's called Elizabethian Era language, then? What do you call "Medieval Era language?"

"A black cat dropped soundlessly from a high wall, like a spoonful of dark treacle and melted under the gate."
-Elizabeth Lemarchand
Mr. Parcelan
posted 04-14-2005 06:49:20 PM
quote:
Kait Model 2000 was programmed to say:
Oh...I'm sorry. So it's called Elizabethian Era language, then? What do you call "Medieval Era language?"

Shakespeare!

Manticore
Not Much Fun Anymore
posted 04-14-2005 06:53:03 PM
quote:
Bloodsage had this to say about Optimus Prime:
Damn you for stealing my line!

I stab at thee from my hotel room in California!

Old English would be completely unintelligible to modern speakers.


Hey bloodsage, how are things going in California?

"France tried to turtle, but Hitler did a tank rush before they were ready. Just shows how horribly unbalanced real life is. They should release a patch."
Bloodsage
Heart Attack
posted 04-14-2005 07:43:25 PM
quote:
Verily, the chocolate bunny rabits doth run and play while Manticore gently hums:
Hey bloodsage, how are things going in California?

Still looking for a house. Got a couple of prospects, but it's tough to get a nice place on a short lease.

Got my motorcycle today, though. Doesn't seem like they hurt it in transit, which is a good thing.

Monterey is a really nice area. Staying in a hotel is just about the same as our rent will be, but at least we won't have to eat out 3 meals a day. I'm hoping we can get a place in Pebble Beach--not only would it be cool to live in Pebble Beach, we'd get around the outrageous $8.50 toll to drive on their roads. That section of the coast is incredible, and there are great running and biking paths.

To reign is worth ambition, though in Hell:
Better to reign in Hell than serve in Heaven.

--Satan, quoted by John Milton

Manticore
Not Much Fun Anymore
posted 04-14-2005 08:07:51 PM
quote:
When the babel fish was in place, it was apparent Bloodsage said:
Still looking for a house. Got a couple of prospects, but it's tough to get a nice place on a short lease.

Got my motorcycle today, though. Doesn't seem like they hurt it in transit, which is a good thing.

Monterey is a really nice area. Staying in a hotel is just about the same as our rent will be, but at least we won't have to eat out 3 meals a day. I'm hoping we can get a place in Pebble Beach--not only would it be cool to live in Pebble Beach, we'd get around the outrageous $8.50 toll to drive on their roads. That section of the coast is incredible, and there are great running and biking paths.


Sounds cool, best of luck with that.

"France tried to turtle, but Hitler did a tank rush before they were ready. Just shows how horribly unbalanced real life is. They should release a patch."
Ares
posted 04-14-2005 08:28:09 PM
quote:
Check out the big brain on Bloodsage!
Damn you for stealing my line!

I stab at thee from my hotel room in California!

Old English would be completely unintelligible to modern speakers.


He stole my line too.

It pisses me off when people say "omg Shakespeare's Old English is so hard to read.. omgomg..."

They don't like it much when I try to explain to them that it's modern English. I don't think many people who are around now would be able to read true Old English and understand it. It's almost like a different language.

Zaeron
Pancake
posted 04-14-2005 09:40:43 PM
This thread makes me feel bad for having difficulty following Shakespeare's plays.

Bloodsage
Heart Attack
posted 04-14-2005 09:46:59 PM
quote:
Quoth Ares:
He stole my line too.

It pisses me off when people say "omg Shakespeare's Old English is so hard to read.. omgomg..."

They don't like it much when I try to explain to them that it's modern English. I don't think many people who are around now would be able to read true Old English and understand it. It's almost like a different language.


Heck, most people (including me) can barely wade through Chaucer's Middle English. So I shall give examples!

The Miller's Tale, by Chaucer, in Middle English:

quote:
Whilom ther was dwellynge at Oxenford
A riche gnof, that gestes heeld to bord,
And of his craft he was a carpenter.
With hym ther was dwellynge a poure scoler,
Hadde lerned art, but al his fantasye
Was turned for to lerne astrologye,
And koude a certeyn of conclusiouns,
To demen by interrogaciouns,
If that men asked hym in certain houres
Whan that men sholde have droghte or elles shoures,
Or if men asked hym what sholde bifalle
Of every thyng; I may nat rekene hem alle.
This clerk was cleped hende Nicholas.
Of deerne love he koude and of solas;
And therto he was sleigh and ful privee,
And lyk a mayden meke for to see.
A chambre hadde he in that hostelrye
Allone, withouten any compaignye,
Ful fetisly ydight with herbes swoote;
And he hymself as sweete as is the roote
Of lycorys, or any cetewale.
His Almageste, and bookes grete and smale,
His astrelabie, longynge for his art,
His augrym stones layen faire apart,
On shelves couched at his beddes heed;
His presse ycovered with a faldyng reed

Beowulf, in Old English:

quote:
Hwæt! We Gardena in geardagum,
þeodcyninga, þrym gefrunon,
hu ða æþelingas ellen fremedon.
Oft Scyld Scefing sceaþena þreatum,

monegum mægþum, meodosetla ofteah,
egsode eorlas. Syððan ærest wearð
feasceaft funden, he þæs frofre gebad,
weox under wolcnum, weorðmyndum þah,
oðþæt him æghwylc þara ymbsittendra

ofer hronrade hyran scolde,
gomban gyldan. þæt wæs god cyning!
ðæm eafera wæs æfter cenned,
geong in geardum, þone god sende
folce to frofre; fyrenðearfe ongeat

þe hie ær drugon aldorlease
lange hwile. Him þæs liffrea,
wuldres wealdend, woroldare forgeaf;
Beowulf wæs breme (blæd wide sprang),
Scyldes eafera Scedelandum in.


Hope that helps folks understand the differences.

{edit: removed line numbers from the quotations}

Bloodsage fucked around with this message on 04-14-2005 at 09:48 PM.

To reign is worth ambition, though in Hell:
Better to reign in Hell than serve in Heaven.

--Satan, quoted by John Milton

Delphi Aegis
Delphi. That's right. The oracle. Ask me anything. Anything about your underwear.
posted 04-14-2005 10:13:29 PM
If you can actually speak it aloud, though, Beowulf sounds f'n AWESOME.

Oh, the story is neat too. Or something.

Ares
posted 04-14-2005 10:18:55 PM
quote:
Zaeron Model 2000 was programmed to say:
This thread makes me feel bad for having difficulty following Shakespeare's plays.


I think everyone has trouble the first time they read it. It takes practice to understand the word use and to get the tounge and cheek jokes in there. First time I read Shakespeare, there was a margin of work explainations on one said, and the play on the other. I just kept reading Shakespeare on my own time and I have little problems with it now (a few words make me stop and check the meaning still).

It's really a practice thing. Read enough and it becomes second nature.

Bloodsage: Uh.. Wow.. First "Middle English" Chaucher wasn't too bad.. But Beowulf.. Wow.. I didn't realise it was THAT different.

Kait
has made another completely pointless and off-topic post that nobody cares about
posted 04-14-2005 10:19:32 PM
quote:
Bloodsage had this to say about Captain Planet:
*stuff*

Hot damn, I feel stupid. But very interested in taking classes on how to speak Old English! Too bad my imitation college sucks eggs.

"A black cat dropped soundlessly from a high wall, like a spoonful of dark treacle and melted under the gate."
-Elizabeth Lemarchand
Iulius Czar
Pancake
posted 04-14-2005 10:28:03 PM
quote:
Take out the line breaks, add random punctuation and capitalization...
Whilom ther was DWELLYNGE at Oxenford a RICHE GNOF, that gestes heeld to bord!@$!@1111!! And of his craft he was a CARPENTER!!!!@@!12!!11. With hym ther was dwellynge a POURE SCOLER, hadde lerned art, but al his fantasye Was turned for to lerne ASTROLOGYE !!@!@!@!@@!111111


Kagrama is Chaucer reincarnated.

Gunslinger Moogle
No longer a gimmick
posted 04-15-2005 12:52:43 PM
quote:
Hwæt!

Chixæ!




moogle is the 3241727861th binary digit of pi

Disclaimer: I'm just kidding, I love all living things.
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Vorbis
Vend-A-Goat
posted 04-16-2005 11:28:05 PM
I just read Grendel by John Gardner on my flight back from Chicago. Neat little book. Not sure I took all of it in, since I was easily distracted and it's a somewhat challenging read. Worth another go-through, though.
Nae
Fun with Chocolate
posted 04-16-2005 11:40:02 PM
quote:
Vorbis wrote this then went back to looking for porn:
I just read Grendel by John Gardner on my flight back from Chicago. Neat little book. Not sure I took all of it in, since I was easily distracted and it's a somewhat challenging read. Worth another go-through, though.

One of my favorite books!

When I was in High School, my teacher has us all reading Beowulf, and I read so fast I had nothing to do. So she tested me on Beowulf to see if I had really read it. After I scored perfectly on her test, she offered me her copy of Grendel to read for extra credit.

I have been wanting to get a copy of it, but I always forget to when I am in the store.

Vorbis
Vend-A-Goat
posted 04-17-2005 12:10:07 AM
quote:
From the book of Nae, chapter 3, verse 16:
One of my favorite books!

When I was in High School, my teacher has us all reading Beowulf, and I read so fast I had nothing to do. So she tested me on Beowulf to see if I had really read it. After I scored perfectly on her test, she offered me her copy of Grendel to read for extra credit.

I have been wanting to get a copy of it, but I always forget to when I am in the store.


Do you know what was going on in the earlier part--like when the Queen (Wealtheow) was introduced--with the sudden prose changes? Gardner interjected odd bits that seemed like they should be part of stage directions, or perhaps one of the Shaper's songs, and it threw me off a little.

Big Easy
Pancake
posted 04-17-2005 12:28:55 AM
quote:
Kait Model 2000 was programmed to say:
Oh...I'm sorry. So it's called Elizabethian Era language, then? What do you call "Medieval Era language?"

Shakespeare wasn't Medieval. He was of the Renaissance Period, often said to have started between 1400 and 1500, ending around the early 1600s. Regardless, Shakespeare wasn't born until around 1564.

The Medieval Period ended when Europe entered the Renaissance, and while there were many hold-overs from the period, they were quite different. The renaissance was marked by the flourishing of poetry, local languages (like English, Italian, etc.), and science, while the Church (only one) and Latin, which had dominated the Medieval Period, fell into disfavor. That's why Shakespeare is modern, language aside. While he may have written about medieval topics and personas, he himself was not of the medieval period.

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