Notebook.ai

Debate. Debate. Debate.

Deleted user forum 9471 comments schedule
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person_off
Deleted user

Otherwise my Les Mis trash friend will murder me

I"VE BEEN CALLED OUT

book

Slightly aggressive maybe. But also really chill. Though I can relate to the quote.

person_off
Deleted user

Everyone wanted Hamlet to be like Laertes, without understanding that Laertes is just as fucked up and weird as Hamlet.

And somehow I'm both.

I'm definitely more Hamlet. For I too, stare longingly at skulls and talk about dreaming and dying and pining over lovers I can't have. (eyebrows at Horatio)

book

Looooool.

group
@evastardust groupRRAAAARRL
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Everyone wanted Hamlet to be like Laertes, without understanding that Laertes is just as fucked up and weird as Hamlet.

And somehow I'm both.

I'm definitely more Hamlet. For I too, stare longingly at skulls and talk about dreaming and dying and pining over lovers I can't have. (eyebrows at Horatio)

(Double eyebrows at Horatio, along with a smirk)
I procrastinate, have a plastic human-sized skull who I have dubbed Yorick, contemplate death, and complain.
But I'm also angry and emotional and have like zero chill 99% of the time, and have a father who talks in circles while giving advice.

person_off
Deleted user

LOL
I love it.

@Queen_Cuisine

During my last year of English with my instructor, Mr. Howes, who was quite hilarious and made the class a lot less boring, he had us read Hamlet, and by read Hamlet, I mean he had us Act out our parts as dramatically as possible.

person_off
Deleted user

Mr. Howes is my hero.

Please tell me you had part in this hilarity.

@Queen_Cuisine

Of course, if I remember correctly, I voice acted I want to say Horatio.

I had an advantage being a theatre kid who had extremely dramatic roles.

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@evastardust groupRRAAAARRL
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During my last year of English with my instructor, Mr. Howes, who was quite hilarious and made the class a lot less boring, he had us read Hamlet, and by read Hamlet, I mean he had us Act out our parts as dramatically as possible.

My dude, my buddy, my pal.
My English teacher had us act out Hamlet with sock puppets.

person_off
Deleted user

What is it with teachers and Hamlet???

group
@evastardust groupRRAAAARRL
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I'm not sure.
But that's when I played Laertes.

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@evastardust groupRRAAAARRL
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My teacher refused to let me play Hamlet because of how tightly I'd latched onto Victor Frankenstein (we read Frankenstein right before Hamlet) and said she "wanted me to have a better influence in my life" and that she didn't want me playing the depressed character.

person_off
Deleted user

BECAUSE LAERTES IS SO MUCH BETTER

group
@evastardust groupRRAAAARRL
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I LOVE THEM BOTH!

@Queen_Cuisine

During my last year of English with my instructor, Mr. Howes, who was quite hilarious and made the class a lot less boring, he had us read Hamlet, and by read Hamlet, I mean he had us Act out our parts as dramatically as possible.

My dude, my buddy, my pal.

See Mom? I can make friends on the internet.

My English teacher had us act out Hamlet with sock puppets.

That is even more amusing than my story. For some reason it reminds me of the hand puppet version of Harry Potter, only with Hamlet.

person_off
Deleted user

During my last year of English with my instructor, Mr. Howes, who was quite hilarious and made the class a lot less boring, he had us read Hamlet, and by read Hamlet, I mean he had us Act out our parts as dramatically as possible.

My dude, my buddy, my pal.

See Mom? I can make friends on the internet.

You even have multiple. :O

My English teacher had us act out Hamlet with sock puppets.

That is even more amusing than my story. For some reason it reminds me of the hand puppet version of Harry Potter, only with Hamlet.

Harry Potter Puppet Pals?!?!?!

@Queen_Cuisine

Yes! That! Don't ask me why I thought of Harry Potter Puppet Pals.

person_off
Deleted user

Because they are awesome. :D

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@evastardust groupRRAAAARRL
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Hamlet/Shakespeare Puppet Pals
The girl playing Hamlet said "swored" instead of "sword" every. single. time. and it was hilarious.
Also: Muppet Polonius.

person_off
Deleted user

It's a damn brilliant idea

@Queen_Cuisine

I just came up with an idea for debate topic: Does a word's prior definition have any bearing on it's modern usage?

school
@saor_illust school

I guess, sometimes? If that includes word origins, then yes.

@Queen_Cuisine

Yes, that includes word origins.

@amber_is_in_a_loop

Well that brings up the whole 'reclaiming words' thing

@amber_is_in_a_loop

I think if there's been an active change in the meaning of the word, and not just a change over time, I think that the previous meaning affects it but in a positive way (as in highlighting the change of meaning that's been done)

book

Explain “active change”.

Okokok…
Salt and caramel should not go together.
Caramel is SWEET and GOOD and you are RUINING it if you put salt in it.

book

Nah. Salt brings out the flavor. I mean, too much is too much. But salt is an enhancer to most foods.

@amber_is_in_a_loop

As in, instead of the word over time just growing to mean something else, people literally claim the word and start using it as their own meaning. The example that comes to mind is the use of the word 'queer'. It use to be used a slur, but the LGBTQ+ community publicly claimed it and now most use it to say they're part of the community