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Hark thee! ‘Tis Talk like Shakespeare Day!

National Talk Like Shakespeare Day, April 23, honors playwright, poet, actor, and writer William Shakespeare. Although his birthday is questionable, many scholars suggest it was April 23, 1564. Truly happenstance, Shakespeare passed on the same day 52 years later!

This holiday was first declared by Chicago Mayor Daley on the 445th anniversary of the famous playwright’s birth. Shakespeare is best known for his plays: Romeo & Juliet, Hamlet, Macbeth, and King Lear among many others.

Shakespeare is credited for contributing hundreds of written words and phrases to the English language including ode, manager, bandit, bedazzled, uncomfortable, in a pickle, green-eyed monster, rant, swagger.

Gather thee with merriment and talketh like Shakespeare today! How doth thy learn? Here are some hints to tryeth:

  • Thou, thee, or ye – Should be used instead of you or your
  • Hast – Should be used instead of “have”
  • ‘Tis, ‘Twas or T’will – Should be used instead of including the whole word “it”
  • Add “eth” – to the end of verbs
  • Speak in rhyming couplets – “Did my heart love till now? Foreswear it, sight. For I ne’er saw true beauty till this night.” – Romeo & Juliet
  • Cranker-rose or cranker-blossom – Used as an insult or in place of cursing
  • Doth – Should be used instead of do or does
  • Drop letters – Such as “ne’er” “o’” “wand’ring” “ev’n”
  • Hark – Should be used instead of “listen”

Source: buildyourlibrary.com

Newsletter Production by PorterOneDesign.com

Since 1980, the American Occupational Therapy Association (AOTA) has celebrated National Occupational Therapy Month and the +213,000 occupational therapists, occupational therapy assistants, and students who work nationwide to create fuller lives for clients and their families.

Occupational therapy practitioners enable people of all ages to live life to its fullest by helping promote health and prevent or cope with injury, illness, or disability. These services can include:

  • Offering ways to resume independence in bathing, dressing, and cooking a meal to seniors who are recovering from a stroke.
  • Helping seniors recovering from injury to regain skills necessary to return home.
  • Providing support for seniors experiencing physical and cognitive changes.
  • Evaluating seniors’ homes to promote safety and prevent falls.

Source: aota.org

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