Shakespeare's plays often contain puns, which are A. archaic phrases. B. rhyming lines C. slang terms. D. plays on words.

Respuesta :

I just took the Penn Foster exam. The answer is, D. Plays on words. I hope this helps! :D

Shakespeare's plays often contain puns, which are plays on words.

What are Shakespearean puns?

  • A ‘pun’ is usually defined as a play on words or a play upon words, but it would be more accurate to describe punning as playing with the sound of words to achieve particular effects.
  • Those effects can be amusement, thought provocation, clarification, or explanation.
  • Puns can also achieve a combination of two or more of those effects.
  • In Shakespeare’s works puns are often an important part of the economy of his poetic texts.
  • Shakespeare’s plays and his sonnets are crammed with puns.
  • Many of them are among the most quoted phrases in the English language: for example, the opening lines of Richard III – ‘Now is the winter of our discontent made glorious summer by this sun of York’ where the speaker, Richard, is referring to himself, a son of the house of York.
  • By using that pun Shakespeare transforms the seasons of winter and summer into the idea of bleak and good times.

Hence, option D is the answer.

To know more about the puns in Shakespeare's play, refer to: https://brainly.com/question/2443983

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