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  1. If you enjoy writing as the most beautiful creative experience, the fun topics suggested in this article will definitely help you unlock your creative potential. Having ‘fun’ is the most important thing in any creative process. Be it writing, singing, dancing, or any form of expression, the substance of creative thought flows out best, when ...

    • As You Like It
    • Hamlet
    • Titus Andronicus
    • Pericles, Prince of Tyre
    • The Tragedy of Coriolanus
    • Richard III
    • The Winter’s Tale
    • Henry IV
    • Troilus and Cressida
    • King Lear

    “Let’s meet as little as we can.” I can totally imagine a Blair Waldorf-ish character pulling off this insult like she owns it. Subtle, saucy, and worth a million bucks, this one just drives the point home, without so much as making a scene. Use it on… Mean in-laws, gossipy colleagues, nosy neighbors―the field is wide open, my friend. Slip this lin...

    If calling someone a “bloody, bawdy villain” isn’t self-explanatory enough, you’ve got ‘remorseless’, ‘treacherous’, ‘lecherous’, and ‘kindless’ to spice it up. Insult like a pro. Use it on… Shoo away the most annoying Internet troll by hurling this at him. Unless, of course you’re arguing on something even remotely Shakespearean. In which case, th...

    “Villain, I have done thy mother.” This is an unabashed yo mamajoke, penned in inimitable Shakespearean. It is also below-the-belt nasty, with an adults-only rating. It’s better to file this in the brain as an interesting read. Use it on… Well, you’d rather not use it, unless you’re actually rehearsing for the part of Aaron in Titus Andronicus.

    “thy food is such As hath been belch’d on by infected lungs.” Okay, I certainly don’t need to explain this one. In fact, this insult is way too comical to even qualify as caustic. ‘Belch’d on by infected lungs’ … who even thinks of that? Except the Bard, that is. Use it on… The next time you’re dining at In-N-Out, and there’s just not enough ‘anima...

    “The tartness of his face sours ripe grapes.” “Hey mister, you ugly!” Use it on… Wow. Just wow. I mean, you’d think that having gone through endless Shakespearean insults as a part of my research, nothing would surprise me anymore. But then I land up reading this, and it blows me away―a face so tart that it sours ripe grapes? For the sake of this p...

    I’ll keep it short. This line is Elizabethan talk for “scram, you bag of dirt!”. Use it on… You’d know better, of course. But methinks, this line could work fabulously well on someone using the lousiest pick-up line on you the next time you’re out looking for some plain old bar-hopping.

    “Thou fresh piece of excellent witchcraft.” Trust the Bard to load a line with just the right amount of razor-sharp sarcasm. ‘Fresh pieces of excellent witchcraft’ are all around us these days, more so in the dog-eat-dog professional world. But as long as we have Shakespeare on our side, we’ll make sure to burn those witches at the proverbial stake...

    “Alas, poor ape, how thou sweat’st.” Yes, I do pity you, you sweaty monkey. But then, if you find yourself at the receiving end of an insult like this, you do stand guilty of bringing it on. Use it on… In an ideal office, a back-stabbing, tattletale colleague described in the section above would get a deserving dressing down from the boss―following...

    Basically means ‘brainless dimwit’. Use it on… George W. Bush. Britney Spears. The Kardashian clan. And all the other insufferables who dwell in our times.

    Ooooh, no one fancies being described as a boil. And not just a plain, old speck of acne―we’re talking ‘plague-sore-embossed-carbuncle’ levels here. This one sure does score high on the meanness meter, which means that you need to reserve it for someone who’s worthy of being an ’embossed carbuncle’. Use it on… Hmm… well who’d be more worthy than th...

  2. Foreshadowing is an interesting literary technique used by writers to help the reader infer certain elements of the plot or provide an inkling of forthcoming events in the storyline. Buzzle cites such examples of foreshadowing in Harper Lee’s much-acclaimed ‘To Kill a Mockingbird’.

  3. Here are a list of kick-ass ideas that you can use. I am sure that going through this list will encourage your creativity, and egg you on to be more inventive with such ideas. Editorial Ideas for Newspapers. At different age levels, readers look for a different feel in the editorials.

  4. What Is the Difference Between Effective and Affective? # “Effective” and “affective” are adjectives. The former is derived from the noun “effect”, and the latter, from the noun “affect”.

  5. Assonance is one such literary device, where the vowel sounds are repeated to create an internal rhyming within sentences or phrases. Assonance is known to be the building block of verse and is used to increase the stress on a subject or simply to add flare.

  6. This Penlighten article provides a list of all the books by C. S. Lewis in chronological order. When you hear the name C. S. Lewis, the first thing to pop into your head will probably be ‘Narnia!’. Yes, he is the famous author of this much-loved series of books and movies.

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