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TAREA 4 competencia digital subtítulos en vídeo - Contenido educativo

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Subido el 21 de octubre de 2023 por Marta De La H.

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Tarea 4 Marta de la Hoz

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Today we are going to continue learning about his comedies. As you know we have 00:00:00
introduced A Midsummer Night's Dream and we're gonna continue with some of the 00:00:06
common traits Shakespearean comedies and Shakespearean tragedies share. 00:00:13
Shakespearean comedies have a light-hearted ending. They are happy. 00:00:18
You're not gonna cry at the end of them or you're not gonna cry out of sadness 00:00:23
at least. Unless you love weddings then you might cry. There are mistaken 00:00:29
identities which means characters are going to confuse each other so you might 00:00:36
take your brother for your sister. There are clever plot twists which means that 00:00:43
things don't look the way they are. So usually around the middle of the play 00:00:49
you're gonna see that things change and they went the way we expected them to be. 00:00:54
There are gonna be lots of puns which means witty language. Shakespeare loved 00:01:00
playing with the language and he's going to use it a lot in his plays. And also 00:01:05
stock characters that means stereotypical and these stereotypical 00:01:11
characters that we can find in A Midsummer Night's Dream are the young 00:01:16
couple, the fool, the clever servant. Well in A Midsummer Night's Dream it's gonna 00:01:21
be the clever fairy. Clever and a little bit mischievous. Then we've got 00:01:28
Shakespearean tragedies. Here the hero shows a fatal weakness. That fatal 00:01:34
weakness is gonna lead him to his downfall which usually is his death. 00:01:41
This downfall is gonna be provoked by an evil spirit or some manipulative 00:01:47
character who, surprise surprise, usually is a woman. You are also gonna find lots 00:01:54
of metaphors and similes. Remember metaphors is basically adding a 00:02:03
characteristic of something to something that we think is similar. For example 00:02:09
saying that someone's a serpent by meaning they're evil. Or similes. 00:02:15
Similes are more of a straight comparison. Here you're gonna find like, us, or us 00:02:22
whatever, us. For example saying dead as a doornail which is an expression 00:02:29
Shakespeare created to mean someone's dead and we still use nowadays. There are 00:02:35
many expressions that we can find Shakespeare's plays that we use 00:02:42
nowadays. Here are some of them. You've got Mum's the word, it's Greek to me, 00:02:45
Walgood's chase. These are some of the ones that I have included in this 00:02:50
presentation. You have to just search for the meaning of them and tell me about it 00:02:54
in our next class. If you find any other expression that Shakespeare created 00:03:01
please bring it to class and we'll discuss it tomorrow. Bye-bye! 00:03:06
Idioma/s:
en
Idioma/s subtítulos:
en
Autor/es:
Marta de la Hoz
Subido por:
Marta De La H.
Licencia:
Reconocimiento - Compartir igual
Visualizaciones:
7
Fecha:
21 de octubre de 2023 - 20:55
Visibilidad:
Clave
Centro:
IES FORTUNY
Duración:
03′ 14″
Relación de aspecto:
1.78:1
Resolución:
1920x1080 píxeles
Tamaño:
14.06 MBytes

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