Search from various English teachers...
Alsen
bad words from Shakespeare: Jan 15, 2011
who can tell me what does this mean in Chinese:
whoreson beetle-headed flap-eared knave
Jan 15, 2011 2:25 PM
Corrections · 4
bad words from Shakespeare: Jan 15, 2011
Who can tell me what <strike>does</strike> this means in Chinese?whoreson beetle-headed flap-eared knave
Hi Alen,
I'll write it again here because the comment section ruined the paragraphing. :)
This phrase is very condensed, even for English speakers.
<em>whoreson</em> = his mother is a prostitute. Shakespeare loved this word.
<em>beetle-headed</em> = he has a head (and probably a brain) like a beetle.
<em>flap-eared</em> = his ears are large and flap about. That is, they flap about instead of hearing what is said. <em>knave</em> = two meanings. One is a serving-boy. The other meaning is a wicked, deceitful person. Shakespeare means both.
January 15, 2011
Hi Alen, this phrase is very condensed, even for English speakers.
whoreson = his mother is a prostitute. Shakespeare loved this word.
beetle-headed = he has a head (and probably a brain) like a beetle.
flap-eared = his ears are large and flap about. That is, they flap about instead of hearing what is said.
knave = two meanings. One is a serving-boy. The other meaning is a wicked, deceitful person. Shakespeare means both.
January 15, 2011
Want to progress faster?
Join this learning community and try out free exercises!
Alsen
Language Skills
Chinese (Mandarin), English, French
Learning Language
English, French
Articles You May Also Like

How to Ask for a Raise or Promotion in English
9 likes · 8 Comments

The Key to Learning a Language Faster
31 likes · 8 Comments

Why "General English" is Failing Your Career (An Engineer’s Perspective)
30 likes · 12 Comments
More articles
