Communication Lessons from Shakespeare-Revisited

I blogged about this some time ago.  While looking through my posts for another article, I found it and thought I’d share it again.  Enjoy!

While going through my email files, I found the following quote:

“Conversation should be pleasant without scurrility, witty without affectation, free without indecency, learned without conceitedness, novel without falsehood.” ~William Shakespeare

Shakespeare packs quite a lot into this one line and I thought it so profound that I wanted to dissect it to get the full impact of what he is saying here.

Shakespeare says that conversation should be pleasant without scurrility.  Scurrility is abusive language or a rude remark. This is quite unique today with the invention of electronic communication such as you are reading here.  More and more I see people who feel free or even justified to be rude just because they don’t have to look their victim in the eye as they do it.

Next he says conversation should be witty without affectation. Affectation means a speech that is not natural for you.  It is natural to want to put your best foot forward when we present ourselves to others but it is important that we don’t change who God made us to fit that bill.  I’m a goofball.  It comes naturally.  I goof around with language when I write and speak.  It’s natural for me.  If I were to try to be some Serious Sally, you might feel like I was putting on airs.  In fact, I have a story to tell you about that.

Way back when I first started writing communication studies, my husband was in charge of editing my work.  He doesn’t write the way I do.  He’s got a fabulous sense of humor, but he doesn’t write that way.  His style is more formal and polished.  After reading over his changes, I remember thinking it sounded like I swallowed a dictionary!  I took it back to him and said, “Lighten up, Francis!”  (from a line in a movie)

God gave each of us a unique perspective.  Nobody wants to read what you think someone else would say.  They want to know what YOU think.

Next Shakespeare says we should be free without indecency.  Free speech should not be so free that we compromise moral decency. Free speech has its consequences and one of them is that we have now become a society where anything goes, but very little is valuable.  It’s hard to draw that line in law, but most of us know when it’s been crossed.   Ephesians 4:29 tells us, “Let no corrupt communication proceed out of your mouth, but that which is good to the use of edifying, that it may minister grace unto the hearers.”

For the past few weeks, I’ve been posting some fabulous videos of Christian comedians and I’ve noticed something.  It takes so much more talent and creativity to be funny without swearing and what results makes you laugh even more!

Next he talks about being learned without conceitedness.  Conversation should strive to be intelligent discussion without putting on those airs.  Anne Morrow Lindbergh said “Good communication is as stimulating as black coffee and just as hard to sleep after.”

Do you have someone in your life that you dread talking to?  Someone who either never says anything new or someone who is always talking about himself so that you get bored with the conversation?  Do you have someone in your life you just LOVE talking to?  Maybe this person is an elderly relative who always has such rich and interesting stories to tell about life in the last century.  Conversation can be dull or it can have you hanging on every word.  It’s up the the individual to give something interesting of himself and there is a fine line between giving of himself and giving himself.

Finally, Shakespeare talks about being novel without falsehood.  This goes along the same lines as the previous segment.  There are those for whom boredom breaks out of his mouth because he never interjects a novel idea into the conversation.  Then there are those who spin wild tales just to wow their audience who is fully aware that almost none of this fantastic tale is actually true.

I hope you enjoyed your Communication lessons from Shakespeare!  I now return you to your regularly scheduled era.

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Share your family’s made up words

Wednesdays are usually the times when I share an obscure word or a deeper meaning of a commonly used word.  Since we’ve been celebrating Dr. Seuss this week, I thought I’d ask you all to share your own favorite made up words/terms this Word of the Week.

Dr. Seuss made up silly, nonsense words and terms for his books.  It’s what made his books so much fun.  Some made up words eventually find their way into the dictionary.  Many of the words we commonly use today were made up by a man named William Shakespeare.

My family has made up words and terms.  My daughter and son made up the word “nork,” a combination of the word nerd and dork which they affectionately use with each other as a term of endearment.  My son claims to be the Supreme Alpha Nork to Infinity, which I suppose, is a high honor.  lol

What words has your family made up?  Please share your family’s word stories.

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“UNwords” and How to Handle ‘Em

For the past several weeks, I’ve been talking about misused words.  Some have been misused on purpose in order to deceive and some have been misused by accident due to the complexities of the English language.  Today, I’d like to talk to you about the words that are misused on purpose for humor or for effect.

Shakespeare was famous for inventing or coining words.  Many of the words we use today are words he created.  I’ve dabbled in the creation of words here and there in order to entertain and to make a point.  But is there a point at which intentionally misusing words becomes confusing and counterproductive?  Indeed there is.

I’d like to start off by citing a few words that have been coined, created, made up.  I’ll share some research I found about each of them and whether or not they are considered acceptable and understood.

1. Ginormous

The first use of Ginormous was in 1948 as British “military forces’ slang”.  It’s a blend of gigantic and enormous and refers to something extremely large or gigantic in size.  Ginormous is a word that is currently acceptable to use, but only in informal conversation.  It is considered a bit too childish a word to use in formal or business settings.

2. Frugal

Frugal was one of the thousands of words created by William Shakespeare.  It’s first use was in 1598 in The Merry Wives of Windsor and has become part of the common English terms. I don’t think I have to tell you its meaning.

3. Chillax

Chillax was first used in about 1996 by teens to mean a combination of chill and relax.  It’s usually only acceptable if you are somewhere between 14 and 20 and, then, only when not directed toward a parent!

4. Nucular

Nucular is actually a mispronunciation of the word Nuclear.  It appears to have been brought into the limelight by former President George W. Bush, but I have been told that it is pronounced this way by some Southerners.  Nucular is not an acceptable way to pronounce nuclear as evidenced by the numerous times former President Bush was chastised for it.

5. Irregardless

Now here’s a word that has been misused by the general public since at least 1874!  It is thought to be a combination of irrespective and regardless.  “Irregardless” of its widespread misuse for more than 130 years, it has not endeared itself to the dictionary powers that be!  Thus it is considered just plain wrong.

I have been known to create a word here and there as well.  You may have read my monthly FIMM column where I report his misadventures for your amusement and “confusement!”   Additionally, you might have read my recent communication article, My Reasons vs Your Excuses, where I talk about “reascuses” being a blurring of reasons and excuses.

Making up your own words can be fun and entertaining, but as I said before, it can also be confusing.  Here are some tips for using “unwords.”

1. Use quotes.

When using a word you have made up, put quotes around it to offset it from the sentence allowing your reader to understand that this is something unusual.

2. Have them make sense.

The reader should have little trouble gaining the meaning of your new word from the context of the sentence.  Making your reader struggle and strain (“strainuggle?”) to decipher your communication is frustrating at best.

3. Don’t over do it!

Having “muchomany” “unwords” in your sentence, even if “everyonebody” can follow your line of “rethinking,” can be quite cumbersome and perhaps even “megasupericiously” “confusicating!”

This concludes your lesson on when it is “okey smokey” to “use-ify” “unwords.”   I now return you to your regularly scheduled blog!

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JoJo Tabares holds a degree in Speech Communication.  Her Christian and humorous approach to communication skills has made her a sought after speaker.  JoJo’s articles have appeared in various homeschool magazines and websites such as Dr. Laura.com.  Her Say What You Mean curricula is endorsed by The Old Schoolhouse Magazine and her eBook, Say What You Mean When You’re in Business, has been used by direct sales leaders and small business owners alike.  For more information, please visit http://www.ArtofEloquence.com

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Banana Slugs, A Boy Named Sue & Marijuana Pepsi

According to Gertrude Stein, “A rose is a rose is a rose.”  Shakespeare’s young Juliet tells Romeo that he is not an evil Montague, but asks “What’s in a name? That which we call a rose by any other name would smell as sweet.

What IS in a name?  Most parents spend nine months searching out the perfect name for their children.  Why?  Because going through life with the wrong name (or more to the point, a silly name), can be difficult at best and devastating at worst.  Consider the song “A Boy Named Sue” sung by Johnny Cash.  How’d you like to go through life trying to explain that one?!

What’s in a name?  Who people think we are, that’s what!  A person’s name communicates something to others.  If you don’t believe me try this on for size.  What would you expect when introduced to the following people:

* Maximilian Bartholomew Wentworth III

* Billy Joe Bob Baker

* Maria Molina Pilar Martinez Lopez

Why am I telling you this?  Well the other day I spotted an internet article from MSNBC.  We all know various celebrities who gave their children some pretty weird names, Moon Unit and Dweezil Zappa among them.  However, it reports that celebrities aren’t the only ones these days.  How’d you like to answer to Marijuana Pepsi Sawyer?  She says she is a strong woman having gone through childhood and a career with this name.  Marijuana Pepsi is a college counselor.

Now if you got away scott free (or Mary Freemont), you should know that people aren’t the only ones whose names can be a challenge!  My daughter found some pretty odd sounding sports team names that just didn’t communicate they were going to be tough competition.  Here are just a few:

* UC Santa Cruz Banana Slugs

* Cairo Syrupmakers

* Mt Clemons Battling Bathers

* Scottsdale Community College Fighting Artichokes

And I have to close with this family story.  When my niece was about 4 years old, she found out that a woman changed her name when she got married.  She said, “But what if I marry a man named Snotsickle!”

Like it or not names communicate something to others whether good or bad.  Though the Lord knows who we are in our hearts, the world will form opinions of us by what we call ourselves that can either help us or create a hurdle for us to overcome.

Food for thought from the folks at Art of Elephants Art of Eloquence.com!

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Communication Lessons from Shakespeare

Communication Lessons from Shakespeare

While going through my email files, I found the following quote:

“Conversation should be pleasant without scurrility, witty without affectation, free without indecency, learned without conceitedness, novel without falsehood.” ~William Shakespeare

Shakespeare packs quite a lot into this one line and I thought it so profound that I wanted to disect it to get the full impact of what he is saying here.

Shakespeare says that conversation should be pleasant without scurrility.  Scurrility is abusive language or a rude remark. This is quite unique today with the invention of electronic communication such as you are reading here.  More and more I see people who feel free or even justified to be rude just because they don’t have to look their victim in the eye as they do it.

Next he says conversation should be witty without affectation. Affectation means a speech that is not natural for you.  It is natural to want to put your best foot forward when we present ourselves to others but it is important that we don’t change who God made us to fit that bill.  I’m a goofball.  It comes naturally.  I goof around with language when I write and speak.  It’s natural for me.  If I were to try to be some Serious Sally, you might feel like I was putting on airs.  In fact, I have a story to tell you about that.

Way back when I first started writing communication studies, my husband was in charge of editing my work.  He doesn’t write the way I do.  He’s got a fabulous sense of humor, but he doesn’t write that way.  His style is more formal and polished.  After reading over his changes, I remember thinking it sounded like I swallowed a dictionary!  I took it back to him and said, “Lighten up, Francis!”  (from a line in a movie)

God gave each of us a unique perspective.  Nobody wants to read what you think someone else would say.  They want to know what YOU think.

Next Shakespeare says we should be free without indecency.  Free speech should not be so free that we compromise moral decency. Free speech has its consequences and one of them is that we have now become a society where anything goes, but very little is valuable.  It’s hard to draw that line in law, but most of us know when it’s been crossed.   Ephesians 4:29 tells us, “Let no corrupt communication proceed out of your mouth, but that which is good to the use of edifying, that it may minister grace unto the hearers.”

For the past few weeks, I’ve been posting some fabulous videos of Christian comedians and I’ve noticed something.  It takes so much more talent and creativity to be funny without swearing and what results makes you laugh even more!

Next he talks about being learned without conceitedness.  Conversation should strive to be intelligent discussion without putting on those airs.  Anne Morrow Lindbergh said “Good communication is as stimulating as black coffee and just as hard to sleep after.”

Do you have someone in your life that you dread talking to?  Someone who either never says anything new or someone who is always talking about himself so that you get bored with the conversation?  Do you have someone in your life you just LOVE talking to?  Maybe this person is an elderly relative who always has such rich and interesting stories to tell about life in the last century.  Conversation can be dull or it can have you hanging on every word.  It’s up the the individual to give something interesting of himself and there is a fine line between giving of himself and giving himself.

Finally Shakespeare talks about being novel without falsehood.  This goes along the same lines as the previous segment.  There are those for whom boredom breaks out of his mouth because he never interjects a novel idea into the conversation.  Then there are those who spin wild tales just to wow their audience who is fully aware that almost none of this fantastic tale is actually true.

I hope you enjoyed your Communication lessons from Shakespeare!  I now return you to your regularly scheduled era.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~
JoJo Tabares holds a degree in Speech Communication, but it is her humorous approach to communication skills which has made her a highly sought-after Christian speaker and writer.  Her articles appear in homeschool publications, such as Homeschool Enrichment Magazine and The Old Schoolhouse Magazine, which also endorses her Say What You Mean curricula.  You can also find JoJo on web sites such as Crosswalk.com and Dr.Laura.com.  For more information on communication FUNdamentals and Christian-based communication skills for the whole family, please visit http://www.ArtofEloquence.com

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