One of the most valuable and permanent myths about English is that the vocabulary is mainly through one genius: William Shakespeare. We would like to point out that this is not a fact without trying to impair the importance of being seen by many as one of our great writers.
Where can we get this concept? It seems that I misread data of Oxford English Dictionary. In 1928 when the work was first published, it was welcomed as one of the best dictionary achievements ever. One of the features of this dictionary is that the editor provides a huge historical background including millions of dates references. For each title, the editor showed the earliest usage of the word at that time. For thousands of entries in the first edition of OED, the use of words was first recorded in William Shakespeare's work.
The editor of the OED is worth noting that he did not say that he invented the word of X "because we have an entry for X, of which Shakespeare is the best known user" . Out, he guessed, if the OED could not find the initial usage that no one else had. However, most of the citations included in the OED were sent by volunteers, and these volunteers searched for Shakespearean words, such as legal documents, than previously using his "currency" I like to do. Memorandum of Understanding and Traditional Church Ideas
As the dictionary editor accessed the electronic database, the number of words in Shakespeare as the first source of information dramatically decreased. However, from the list of the Internet to the academic papers, it is often said about the form "Shakespeare created the word X". So, in the spirit of a clear vocabulary - or if you like, or cautious - we will show you the list of words that people invented by Shakespeare want to say.
If there is no correct word you invented, the author has the right to suggest a word. You might say that the writer needs to invent text. What if Shakespeare did not devise words such as advertisement, hints, tranquility etc? The important thing is to invent a contextual clue and to be cautious about relying heavily on it. If you select an unusual word in sentences, it may hurt the reader or double appearance. People who want to take words from a foreign language are very interesting. The long words are very interesting. The vocabulary being spoken is essential for authenticity. Anyway - using unusual words - please! Just be careful, pay attention to the process
English has a lot of debts for Shakespeare. He turns nouns into verbs, turning verbs into adjectives, connecting unprecedented words, adding prefixes and suffixes, and designing the original word entirely, gives over 1,700 common words I invented it. Here are some words that link to dramas and scenes written by Shakespeare. If a word appears in more than one script, clicking on the link moves you to the script that was displayed first. For more information on Shakespeare's vocabulary, click here.
Shakespeare is the biggest inventor in English or any language. He created about 3,000 English words, including everyday words such as "jaded", "bandit", "mountaineer". Shakespeare invented generic words such as "propaganda" and "skim milk", but I can not believe he created them. He invented flashy words such as "appearance of a spoken dialogue", "boring", "relationship of blood". The name Jessica was originally used as a "merchant of Venice". Every time we open our mouth, his influence grows.
William Shakespeare invented over 1,700 words. In most cases, he uses nouns as verbs, verbs as adjectives, or words like "stained glass blood". As most Queen Elizabeth can not read or write, nobody seems to care. Because there is no reason to believe that people are no longer words, words such as "naked" and "stained glass" occupy places. Shakespeare knows about 66,534 words. Regular people know 10,000 to 20,000. A quarter of these words are software terms, sports terms, marketing terms, or names of breakfast cereals. If someone is crazy, we will say they are either "fruit" or "cuckoo cocoa". The latter appeared for mascot cuckoo birds invented by Genes Mills. Sony is more like a jerk than a madman