Hi, teacher,
"That was the most unkindest cut of all." sounds strange to me. I can't understand it. Why is there "the most" before " unkindest" , the adjective in superlative degree?
Thanks!
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Hi, teacher,
"That was the most unkindest cut of all." sounds strange to me. I can't understand it. Why is there "the most" before " unkindest" , the adjective in superlative degree?
Thanks!
Sorry, maybe I should not have quoted that.
It comes from Shakespeare. I believe that Mark Antony said it about a wound in the dead Julius Caesar. What I meant to do was to show that English must not always obey rules to be great. Shakespeare used the superlative degree twice for emphasis.
Something similar happens with the double negative that Beatrice uses in "Much Ado About Nothing" when she says, "Stop his mouth with a kiss and let him not speak neither" (or something like that).
Frank
Another example might be, "I can't get no satisfaction". Do you think that song would have been better if the lyric had been, "I can't get any satisfaction." or "I can get no satisfaction".