47
Act I The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

Act I The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

  • Upload
    wendi

  • View
    61

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Act I The Tragedy of Julius Caesar. On your noteguide, write your own definition for the word “pun.”. Examples of Puns. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

Act I The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

Page 2: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

On your noteguide, write your own

definition for the word “pun.”

Page 3: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar
Page 4: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

Now, look down the center of your noteguide at each of the sentences marked by a diamond. Each one of these sentences will be a pun--when you have filled in the blank to complete the sentence.

Page 5: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

Let’s do the first one as an example.

Page 6: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

Reading while sunbathing makes you well-___.red

Page 7: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

Now, you try the

other puns on your own.

Page 8: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

When two egotists meet, it's an ___ for an ___.

Page 9: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

When two egotists meet, it's an I for an I.

Page 10: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

A bicycle can't stand on its own because it is ___ tired.

Page 11: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

A bicycle can't stand on its own because it is two tired.

Page 12: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

What's the definition of a will? (It's a ____ giveaway.)

Page 13: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

What's the definition of a will? (It's a dead giveaway.)

Page 14: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

In democracy your vote counts.

In feudalism your count ____.

Page 15: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

In democracy your vote counts.

In feudalism your count votes.

Page 16: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

With her marriage, she got a new name and a ______.

Page 17: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

With her marriage, she got a new name and a dress.

Page 18: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

When a clock is hungry, it goes back ____ seconds.

Page 19: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

When a clock is hungry, it goes back four seconds.

Page 20: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

You feel stuck with your debt if you can't ______ it.

Page 21: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

You feel stuck with your debt if you can't budge it.

Page 22: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

Local Area Network in Australia: the ____ down under.

Page 23: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

Local Area Network in Australia: the LAN down under.

Page 24: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

Bakers trade bread recipes on a _______-to-know basis.

Page 25: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

Bakers trade bread recipes on a knead-to-know basis.

Page 26: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

A boiled egg in the morning is hard to ____.

Page 27: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

A boiled egg in the morning is hard to beat.

Page 28: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

A midget fortune-teller who escapes from prison is a small ________ at large.

Page 29: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

A midget fortune-teller who escapes from prison is a small medium at large.

Page 30: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

Those who get too big for their britches will be exposed in the ___.

Page 31: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

Those who get too big for their britches will be exposed in the end.

Page 32: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

Once you've seen one shopping center, you've seen a ____.

Page 33: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

Once you've seen one shopping center, you've seen a mall.

Page 34: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

Did your definition of “pun” allow for each of the

previously cited examples?

Page 35: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

A rhetorical wordplay in which the writer surprisingly reveals that words with totally different meaning have similar or even identical sounds

Page 36: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

Act I, scene iAct I, scene i

Page 37: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

Remember the one thing that Remember the one thing that Shakespeare and other Elizabethan Shakespeare and other Elizabethan playwrights HAD to take care of right playwrights HAD to take care of right at the beginning of their plays:at the beginning of their plays:

Page 38: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

Getting the attention of the groundlings!Getting the attention of the groundlings!

Page 39: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

In Romeo and Juliet, Shakespeare uses a _______ to get their attention.

In Hamlet, he uses a ___________ to get their attention.

In Macbeth, he uses ___________ to get their attention.

fightfight

ghostghost

witcheswitches

Page 40: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

In The Tragedy of Julius Caesar, however, Shakespeare uses _______ to get the attention of this rowdy bunch.

punspuns

Page 41: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

In your notes, identify the puns that the plebeians use to get the

best of the tribunes.

Page 42: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

Lines 10 and 11

• “workman” verses “cobbler”

The word “workman” implies that the cobbler is a skilled worker; however, a “cobbler” (besides being someone who repairs shoes) is somebody who messes up everything he tries to do.

Page 43: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

Lines 13 and 14

• “safe conscience…mender of bad soles”

The wordplay here is on the homophone “soles”—which, when used after the word “conscience,” sounds like “souls”; however, we know that since the speaker is a cobbler, he speaks in reality of the soles of shoes.

Page 44: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

Lines 17 and 18

• When the cobbler tells Flavius to “be not out with him,” he actually means for Flavius to not be angry with him; however, when he says “yet, if you be out, sir, I can mend you,” he speaks of fixing the soles of the shoes that are worn out.

Page 45: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

Line 21

• When Marullus asks what the cobbler means when he says that he can “mend him,” the cobbler replies by saying “Why, sir, cobble you.” Taken in the connotative meaning of the word, the cobbler is saying that he’s “messing up” the tribune—which he’s doing verbally.

Page 46: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

Lines 23 through 28

• The pun in the lines is with the word “awl,” which is a tool. But the way it was heard would have been “all.”

• In addition, he says that he meddles with no “women’s matters,” which is an off-color pun.

Page 47: Act I  The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

Lines 31 through 33

• When Flavius asks why the cobbler leads the men about the streets, he tells them that he’s trying to get himself more work by wearing out the men’s shoes.