Shakespeare did no one any favors by saying it's Greek to me.

sitifan

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Yes, and that person has no sense of humor. That famous line is in the Shakespearean play, Julius Caesar. Anyhow, I can't recall their names off the top of my head, and I don't remember it exactly, but here goes.

Roman One: What do you think about what he said?
Roman Two: It's Greek to me.

What Roman Two means is that the person was speaking Greek, which he does not understand.
 
Yes. He means to say that Shakespeare gave people the impression that Greek is hard, when in fact it isn't.


The 'bad effect' mentioned in the dictionary entry is in this context a false impression that Greek is hard.
 
Also, '(all) Greek to me' is defined here. ('If you say that something is all Greek to you, you mean that you do not understand it at all.')
 
@jutfrank I guess I have a false impression about Greek.
 
Δεν είναι τόσο δύσκολο αν έχεις έναν καλό μεταφραστή.
And to think that they gave us the alphabet! I don't recognize any of those letters.
All the letters in red in the top quote box are the same letters in English (ignoring the accents). There are still some people who write an "e" as "ε" (including my dad, who studied Greek).
 
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