![]() Somewhat more common in the Sonnets are words that are still in use but that in Shakespeare’s day had meanings that are no longer current. ![]() Among the more than a thousand words that make up the first ten sonnets, for instance, only eleven are not to be found in current usage: self-substantial (“derived from one’s own substance”), niggarding (“being miserly”), unfair (“deprive of beauty”), leese (“lose”), happies (“makes happy”), steep-up (“precipitous”), highmost (“highest”), hap (“happen”), unthrift (“spendthrift”), unprovident (“improvident”), and ruinate (“reduce to ruins”). One surprising feature of the Sonnets is how rarely such archaic words appear. Some are words that are no longer in general use-words that the dictionaries label archaic or obsolete, or that have so fallen out of use that dictionaries no longer include them. ![]() Shakespeare’s Wordsīecause Shakespeare’s sonnets were written more than four hundred years ago, they inevitably contain words that are unfamiliar today. While most often discussed in terms of its images and its metrical and other formal structures, the language of the Sonnets, like that of Shakespeare’s plays, also repays close attention to such basic linguistic elements as words, word order, and sentence structure. ![]() The language of Shakespeare’s Sonnets, like that of poetry in general, is both highly compressed and highly structured. ![]()
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