AMND+Wiki+2009-10+Act+III++Sara

** I think that Shakespeare's language is enthralling because some words have another meaning than it has in modern English. For example, Titania says that she gossiped, but she did not mean that she talked bad about a person. **(Still needs a proper sentence to close this idea and lead to the next.)**
 * Why do we like the Shakespearean language?

I also like that Shakespeare used many rhymes in his plays; for example, in Act 3, Scene 2, Line 45- 57, Hermia rhymes. It is always the last word in the line and always two lines rhyme. The last words of the part I have chosen are:

Now I but chide, but I should use thee worse. For thou, I fear, hast given me cause to curse. if thou hast slain Lysander in his sleep , Being o’er shoes in blood, plunge in the deep ,

worse-- curse sleep-- deep soon-- moon him-- grim

I really like that kind of writing because I think that it sounds better and it makes more fun to read **__thing__** that rhyme!

and there are also __**cuplets**__ that __**shakespeare**__ uses in his plays but I am not sure about this one __**(needs punctuation--also, why are you not sure?)**__ Act 3, Scene 2, Line 35-40 :

Oberon ( 35- 37) This falls out better than I could devise. Bust hast thou yet latched the Athenian's eyes With the love juice, as I did bid thee do ? Robin ( 38- 40) I took him sleeping -- that is finished too -- And the Athenian woman by his side, That, when he waked, of force she must be eyed.

In his play **__A midsummer night' dream__** Shakespeare writes like he always does. **(Really?)** The story **__gets always__** more interesting until act 3 and then it falls again [|See a SELFMADE Diagramm]

I think that it is great how Shakespeare did that; I also think that it is kind of boding after act 3. But it is very important because people have to know how it is going to end and how the characters get a happy ending or a sad ending.

__**(Still need to completely finish your thoughts.)**__