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Hamlet - Video Summary
Visit us at https://www.gradesaver.com/hamlet/study-guide/video-hamlet to read the full video transcript and our study guide for this classic play, which includes a full list of characters, themes, and much more.
Hamlet is a tragedy written by Shakespeare at the turn of the 16th century. The play’s story, which can be traced back to a 12th-century Latin text, is about a Danish prince named Hamlet who seeks to avenge his father’s murder at the hands of his uncle, Claudius. The play is not only Shakespeare’s longest, but also one of his most iconic.
At the start of the play, the king of Denmark has died, and his brother Claudius has assumed the throne and married his late brother’s wife, Queen Gertrude. Consumed with grief over his father’s sudden death, Prince Hamlet is appalled by his ...
published: 01 Jul 2021
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Why should you read "Hamlet"? - Iseult Gillespie
Explore William Shakespeare’s classic tragedy, “Hamlet,” a play about conspiracy, deception and the tragic consequences of indecision.
--
“Who’s there?” Whispered in the dark, this question begins a tale of conspiracy, deception and moral ambiguity. And in a play where everyone has something to hide, its answer is far from simple. Written by William Shakespeare, “Hamlet” depicts its titular character haunted by the past, but immobilized by the future. Iseult Gillespie digs into the humanity and tragedy of Hamlet.
Lesson by Iseult Gillespie, directed by Lucy Animation Studio.
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Peep us ...
published: 25 Jun 2019
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2025 ዝም አለ (ZIM ALE) ሐምሌት በልጁን HAMLET BELJUN
ዝም አለ
ከፍ ከፍ ያልህ እግዚአብሔር፣
ኀይሌም ዝማሬዬም እግዚአብሔር፣
አንተ ተዋጊ ድል አድራጊ፣
እኔ መለከት ሥራህን ተራኪ።
የከፈትከውን ማንም አይዘጋ፣
ያልከውን ልትፈጽም የምትተጋ፣
“ተሻገሪ” አልህ ሆነህ አብረኸኝ፣
በራስህ ታምነህ እንድታደርሰኝ።
የተቤዠኸኝ እስከማልፍ ድረስ፣
ወዳየህልኝ እስክገሰግስ፣
አጥፍተህ እሳቱን፣ ነጥቀህ ጉልበቱን
ያላጠቃኝ ክንፍህ ጋርዶኝ።
ጠላቴ እንደ ድንጋይ ዝም አለ፤
ከሳሼ እንደ ድንጋይ ዝም አለ፤
እየዞረኝ ያላገኘኝ፣
ያንተ ምሕረት ስለ ከለለኝ።
አጥፍተህ እሳቱን፣ ነጥቀህ ጉልበቱን፣
ያላጠቃኝ ክንፍህ ጋርዶኝ።
ማንም ‘ማይደፍረው ቅጥሬ፤
አልፎ አማያጠቃኝ አጥሬ፤
ስምህ ጦሬ ነው ጋሻዬ፣
ከብበህ ‘ምትመራኝ ከለላዬ።
ከፍ ከፍ ያልህ እግዚአብሔር፣
ኀይሌም ዝማሬዬም እግዚአብሔር፣
አንተ ተዋጊ ድል አድራጊ፣
እኔ መለከት ሥራህን ተራኪ።
የኀይለኞችን ቀስት ሰብረሃል፤
ደካማዪቱን ኀይል አስታጥቀሃል፤
ከድጥ ጨለማ እግሬን ጠበቅህ፤
ያላንዳች እረዳት ብቻህን መራህ።
እንዴት ድንቅ ነው በአንተ መኖር!
እንዴት መታደል ሕዝብህ መሆን!
በክፉ የሚያይ ልጆችህን፣
እንደ ነካ ነው ብሌንህን።
ጠላቴ እንደ ድንጋይ ዝም አለ፤
ከሳሼ እንደ ድንጋይ ዝም አለ፤
እየዞረኝ ያላገኘኝ፣
ያንተ ምሕረት ስለ ከለለኝ።
አጥፍተህ እሳቱን፣ ነጥቀህ ጉልበቱን፣
ያላጠቃኝ ክንፍህ ጋርዶኝ።
ማንም ‘ማይደፍረው ቅጥሬ፤
አል...
published: 05 Jan 2025
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Hamlet - Laurence Olivier - Shakespeare - 1948 - Multiple Subtitles - HD Restored - 4K
Subtitles: Français - Deutsch - Italiano - Português - Español - Hamlet 1948 - Adapted and Directed by Laurence Olivier
Laurence Olivier's Hamlet was made four years after his rousingly patriotic Henry V (1944), and is a very different proposition. Unsurprisingly, given the tone and content of the play, the overall mood is that of brooding introspection - tellingly, in a phrase not in Shakespeare's original, Olivier opens by telling us that it is "the tragedy of a man who could not make up his mind", foregrounding the film's central theme, a neat metaphor for the uncertainty of the immediate postwar years.
He also largely eliminates the play's political intrigue: Fortinbras is banished, and so too are Rosencrantz and Guildenstern - the three characters most indelibly associated with t...
published: 09 May 2021
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Ghosts, Murder, and More Murder - Hamlet Part 1: Crash Course Literature 203
In which John Green teaches you about Hamlet, William Shakespeare's longest and most-performed play. People love Hamlet. The play that is, not necessarily the character. Hamlet is a Tragedy with a capital T (I guess I don't have to point that out since you can see clearly in the text that the T was capitalized). By Tragedy, I mean virtually everyone dies at the end. John will talk a little bit about the history of the play and the different versions of it that have appeared in the centuries since it was written. You'll also learn about some of the big themes in the play, get a brief plot overview, and the all-important connections between Prince Hamlet and Simba, the Lion King. Seriously though, The Lion King is totally just a Hamlet musical with animals instead of people.
Consider suppor...
published: 14 Mar 2014
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Hamlet
http://www.bju.edu -
Directed by Paul Radford
Set and Costume Design by Jeffrey Stegall
Lighting design by Richard Streeter
DIRECTOR’S NOTES
Hamlet has played an important role in the history of Shakespearean performance at BJU. It was first performed in 1932 at the original campus in College Point, Florida. The production was so well received that the Classic Players took it on tour to several cities in Florida and Alabama. In 1933 Hamlet was the inaugural Classic Players production in Cleveland, Tennessee, the institution’s second home, where both players and play received a warm welcome.
Happily, Shakespeare designed the play with enough intriguing interpretative issues to keep any director and cast from reducing it to a “definitive” version. Classic Players’ productions of Hamlet h...
published: 30 Mar 2020
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Shakespeare Summarized: Hamlet
Well, this one is longer than the last one, but in fairness it's 2000% shorter than the actual movie.
Continuing the trend, this video summarizes THE TRAGEDIE OF HAMLET PRINCE OF DENMARK, commonly known as Hamlet.
Goodness, he really is a whiner, isn't he? And he's supposed to be the sympathetic character!
Note: This is the second version of Hamlet Summarized, because I made the mistake of using a copyrighted song in the last one. Oops.
UPDATE: Julius Caesar Summarized is up! Watch it at http://youtu.be/4e3Y80hUfIQ
published: 19 Apr 2013
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„Hamlet" W. Szekspir - streszczenie i opracowanie w pigułce #matura #matura2021 #język polski
UWAGA! Tylko do 15.01⏰ możesz zgarnąć kurs maturalny 2025 w PROMOCJI i złapać BONUS🤌 Sprawdź👉
https://oferta.kursydomatury.pl/polski/
Hej, Kochani!
🔹Mój kurs online - https://bit.ly/3ilDHSp
Zachęcam Was do pobrania BEZPŁATNEJ lekcji próbnej z Biblii i przetestowania kursu.
🔹Notatki z lektur ogwiazdkowanych: https://notatkidomatury.pl/
🔹Materiały do dzisiejszego filmu prześlę ZA DARMO do osób zapisanych na mój newsletter. Zapisać można się ➡tutaj: http://pracownialiteracka.pl/kontakti...
Dziś przychodzę do Was ze streszczeniem i opracowaniem „Hamleta”. Jestem otwarta na wszelkie Wasze uwagi, uzupełnienia i pytania:) Razem twórzmy społeczność Pracowni Literackiej.
Plan odcinka:
00:00 - 1:16 Wstęp
1:17 - 2:42 O autorze
2:43 - 4:40 Informacje ogólne (gatunek, miejsce akcji)
4:41 - 7:08 Bo...
published: 04 Oct 2020
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Giant Fluffy Hamlet!!! 🦊🐶❤️ #pokemonswordandshield
published: 08 Jan 2025
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Hamlet (1990) Official Trailer - Mel Gibson, Glenn Close Movie HD
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Hamlet (1990) Official Trailer - Mel Gibson, Glenn Close Movie HD
Hamlet, Prince of Denmark, finds out that his uncle Claudius killed his father to obtain the throne, and plans revenge.
Welcome to the Fandango MOVIECLIPS Trailer Vault Channel. Where trailers from the past, from recent to long ago, from a time before YouTube, can be enjoyed by all. We search near and far for original movie trailer from all decades. Feel free to send us your trailer requests and we will do our best to hunt it down.
published: 08 Aug 2014
7:58
Hamlet - Video Summary
Visit us at https://www.gradesaver.com/hamlet/study-guide/video-hamlet to read the full video transcript and our study guide for this classic play, which includ...
Visit us at https://www.gradesaver.com/hamlet/study-guide/video-hamlet to read the full video transcript and our study guide for this classic play, which includes a full list of characters, themes, and much more.
Hamlet is a tragedy written by Shakespeare at the turn of the 16th century. The play’s story, which can be traced back to a 12th-century Latin text, is about a Danish prince named Hamlet who seeks to avenge his father’s murder at the hands of his uncle, Claudius. The play is not only Shakespeare’s longest, but also one of his most iconic.
At the start of the play, the king of Denmark has died, and his brother Claudius has assumed the throne and married his late brother’s wife, Queen Gertrude. Consumed with grief over his father’s sudden death, Prince Hamlet is appalled by his mother’s marriage to Claudius, whose character is, he believes, inferior to that of his deceased father.
Little does Hamlet know, the ghost of his dead father appeared to his skeptical friend Horatio and two castle sentries the previous night. When Horatio tells Hamlet of this sighting, Hamlet decides to watch for the ghost himself that evening. Soon, the ghost appears. Addressing only Hamlet, the ghost says he’s come from purgatory to demand vengeance against his brother Claudius, who murdered him by pouring poison into his ear. Hamlet is shocked and vows to avenge his father’s murder by killing Claudius.
Meanwhile, Claudius’ chief advisor Polonius is concerned about his daughter Ophelia, who loves Hamlet but is confused by his gloomy mood lately. At first, Polonius orders his daughter to stay away from Hamlet, but he later becomes convinced that Ophelia’s lack of affection is the reason for Hamlet’s melancholy. Polonius decides to observe the couple together in secret, hiding behind a tapestry with Claudius. But when Ophelia tries to flirt with Hamlet, his mind is on his father’s murder, and he rebukes her advances, proving Polonius wrong.
Next, Claudius recruits Hamlet’s school friends, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, to discover the reason for Hamlet’s foul mood, but Hamlet quickly realizes that his friends are working against him as spies. Dodging his questions, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern tell Hamlet that they ran into a troupe of actors on their way to the castle and invited them along to perform for the court. Hamlet decides to have these actors perform a play based on the murder of his father, to see how Claudius reacts. If he seems rattled by the performance, it will prove his guilt.
Meanwhile, Claudius learns that Fortinbras, the prince of enemy Norway, has expressed interest in waging war on Denmark, owing to the recent change in the country’s leadership. Claudius is reassured, however, when he learns that Norway’s king has forbade Fortinbras from invading Denmark, and that the Norwegian army intends to invade a small area in Poland instead. To do so, they need Claudius’ permission to march through Denmark, which he grants.
That evening, Claudius indeed seems disturbed by the performance of Hamlet’s play, and even storms out, convincing Hamlet of his guilt. Hamlet decides to tell his mother, but on his way to her chamber, Hamlet overhears Claudius confessing his sins, including the murder, to God. Hamlet nearly kills Claudius, but stops short, realizing that if he killed his uncle while he was praying, Claudius would go straight to heaven.
Hamlet goes to Gertrude’s chamber and tries to convince his mother of Claudius’ evil character. Meanwhile, Polonius is once again spying on their conversation from behind a curtain. At one point, Gertrude misinterprets Hamlet’s words, thinking he intends to kill her. She screams out for help, causing Polonius to scream as well. Assuming it is Claudius behind the curtain, Hamlet stabs at the fabric, killing Polonius.
Following Polonius’ death, Hamlet’s friends Rosencrantz and Guildenstern escort Hamlet on a diplomatic mission to England at the request of Claudius. However, Hamlet is unaware that Claudius gave them a letter for the English king, instructing him to have Hamlet killed upon his arrival. Soon, Hamlet discovers this letter in Rosencrantz and Guildenstern’s possession and secretly replaces it with one asking that his friends be killed instead of him.
Meanwhile, Polonius’ son Laertes, upset over his father’s murder, confronts Claudius and threatens to seize the throne from him with the help of an angry mob. Claudius assures him that Hamlet is responsible, and together, they decide to arrange for a casual duel between Hamlet and Laertes, who is a skilled swordsman. Secretly, they plan to line Laertes’ sword with poison, ensuring that even a small wound will kill Hamlet. As an added precaution, Claudius will prepare a cup of poison to give to Hamlet during the fight.
Returning home from his journey, Hamlet passes through a cemetery, encountering a gravedigger in the midst of preparing a new grave.
https://wn.com/Hamlet_Video_Summary
Visit us at https://www.gradesaver.com/hamlet/study-guide/video-hamlet to read the full video transcript and our study guide for this classic play, which includes a full list of characters, themes, and much more.
Hamlet is a tragedy written by Shakespeare at the turn of the 16th century. The play’s story, which can be traced back to a 12th-century Latin text, is about a Danish prince named Hamlet who seeks to avenge his father’s murder at the hands of his uncle, Claudius. The play is not only Shakespeare’s longest, but also one of his most iconic.
At the start of the play, the king of Denmark has died, and his brother Claudius has assumed the throne and married his late brother’s wife, Queen Gertrude. Consumed with grief over his father’s sudden death, Prince Hamlet is appalled by his mother’s marriage to Claudius, whose character is, he believes, inferior to that of his deceased father.
Little does Hamlet know, the ghost of his dead father appeared to his skeptical friend Horatio and two castle sentries the previous night. When Horatio tells Hamlet of this sighting, Hamlet decides to watch for the ghost himself that evening. Soon, the ghost appears. Addressing only Hamlet, the ghost says he’s come from purgatory to demand vengeance against his brother Claudius, who murdered him by pouring poison into his ear. Hamlet is shocked and vows to avenge his father’s murder by killing Claudius.
Meanwhile, Claudius’ chief advisor Polonius is concerned about his daughter Ophelia, who loves Hamlet but is confused by his gloomy mood lately. At first, Polonius orders his daughter to stay away from Hamlet, but he later becomes convinced that Ophelia’s lack of affection is the reason for Hamlet’s melancholy. Polonius decides to observe the couple together in secret, hiding behind a tapestry with Claudius. But when Ophelia tries to flirt with Hamlet, his mind is on his father’s murder, and he rebukes her advances, proving Polonius wrong.
Next, Claudius recruits Hamlet’s school friends, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, to discover the reason for Hamlet’s foul mood, but Hamlet quickly realizes that his friends are working against him as spies. Dodging his questions, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern tell Hamlet that they ran into a troupe of actors on their way to the castle and invited them along to perform for the court. Hamlet decides to have these actors perform a play based on the murder of his father, to see how Claudius reacts. If he seems rattled by the performance, it will prove his guilt.
Meanwhile, Claudius learns that Fortinbras, the prince of enemy Norway, has expressed interest in waging war on Denmark, owing to the recent change in the country’s leadership. Claudius is reassured, however, when he learns that Norway’s king has forbade Fortinbras from invading Denmark, and that the Norwegian army intends to invade a small area in Poland instead. To do so, they need Claudius’ permission to march through Denmark, which he grants.
That evening, Claudius indeed seems disturbed by the performance of Hamlet’s play, and even storms out, convincing Hamlet of his guilt. Hamlet decides to tell his mother, but on his way to her chamber, Hamlet overhears Claudius confessing his sins, including the murder, to God. Hamlet nearly kills Claudius, but stops short, realizing that if he killed his uncle while he was praying, Claudius would go straight to heaven.
Hamlet goes to Gertrude’s chamber and tries to convince his mother of Claudius’ evil character. Meanwhile, Polonius is once again spying on their conversation from behind a curtain. At one point, Gertrude misinterprets Hamlet’s words, thinking he intends to kill her. She screams out for help, causing Polonius to scream as well. Assuming it is Claudius behind the curtain, Hamlet stabs at the fabric, killing Polonius.
Following Polonius’ death, Hamlet’s friends Rosencrantz and Guildenstern escort Hamlet on a diplomatic mission to England at the request of Claudius. However, Hamlet is unaware that Claudius gave them a letter for the English king, instructing him to have Hamlet killed upon his arrival. Soon, Hamlet discovers this letter in Rosencrantz and Guildenstern’s possession and secretly replaces it with one asking that his friends be killed instead of him.
Meanwhile, Polonius’ son Laertes, upset over his father’s murder, confronts Claudius and threatens to seize the throne from him with the help of an angry mob. Claudius assures him that Hamlet is responsible, and together, they decide to arrange for a casual duel between Hamlet and Laertes, who is a skilled swordsman. Secretly, they plan to line Laertes’ sword with poison, ensuring that even a small wound will kill Hamlet. As an added precaution, Claudius will prepare a cup of poison to give to Hamlet during the fight.
Returning home from his journey, Hamlet passes through a cemetery, encountering a gravedigger in the midst of preparing a new grave.
- published: 01 Jul 2021
- views: 683988
5:09
Why should you read "Hamlet"? - Iseult Gillespie
Explore William Shakespeare’s classic tragedy, “Hamlet,” a play about conspiracy, deception and the tragic consequences of indecision.
--
“Who’s there?” Whisp...
Explore William Shakespeare’s classic tragedy, “Hamlet,” a play about conspiracy, deception and the tragic consequences of indecision.
--
“Who’s there?” Whispered in the dark, this question begins a tale of conspiracy, deception and moral ambiguity. And in a play where everyone has something to hide, its answer is far from simple. Written by William Shakespeare, “Hamlet” depicts its titular character haunted by the past, but immobilized by the future. Iseult Gillespie digs into the humanity and tragedy of Hamlet.
Lesson by Iseult Gillespie, directed by Lucy Animation Studio.
Sign up for our newsletter: http://bit.ly/TEDEdNewsletter
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View full lesson: https://ed.ted.com/lessons/why-should-you-read-hamlet-iseult-gillespie
Thank you so much to our patrons for your support! Without you this video would not be possible! David Matthew Ezroj, Sweetmilkcoco, Raphaël LAURENT, Joe Meyers, Farah Abdelwahab, Brian Richards, Divina Grace Dar Santos, Jessie McGuire, Abdullah Altuwaijri, Sarah Burns, Clement, Hadi Salahshour, FAWWAZ GHUWAIDI, Dino Biancolini, Reagen O'Connor, Nicu Boanda, Cindy O., Karla Brilman, Jørgen Østerpart, Sergi Páez, rakesh Katragadda, Carolyn Corwin, Charlene You, Boris Langvand, Exal Enrique Cisneros Tuch, Carsten Tobehn, Kin Lon Ma, Katie Dean, Ezgi Yersu, Eunsun Kim, Katrina Harding, Gerald Onyango, alessandra tasso, Astia Rizki Safitri, Côme Vincent, Antony Lee, Melissa Sorrells, Rakshit Kothari, Doreen Reynolds-Consolati, Simon Holst Ravn, Manognya Chakrapani, Ayala Ron, Samantha Chow, Philippe Spoden, Phyllis Dubrow, Michelle Stevens-Stanford, Cas Jamieson, Ophelia Gibson Best, Amber Wood and Paul Schneider.
https://wn.com/Why_Should_You_Read_Hamlet_Iseult_Gillespie
Explore William Shakespeare’s classic tragedy, “Hamlet,” a play about conspiracy, deception and the tragic consequences of indecision.
--
“Who’s there?” Whispered in the dark, this question begins a tale of conspiracy, deception and moral ambiguity. And in a play where everyone has something to hide, its answer is far from simple. Written by William Shakespeare, “Hamlet” depicts its titular character haunted by the past, but immobilized by the future. Iseult Gillespie digs into the humanity and tragedy of Hamlet.
Lesson by Iseult Gillespie, directed by Lucy Animation Studio.
Sign up for our newsletter: http://bit.ly/TEDEdNewsletter
Support us on Patreon: http://bit.ly/TEDEdPatreon
Follow us on Facebook: http://bit.ly/TEDEdFacebook
Find us on Twitter: http://bit.ly/TEDEdTwitter
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View full lesson: https://ed.ted.com/lessons/why-should-you-read-hamlet-iseult-gillespie
Thank you so much to our patrons for your support! Without you this video would not be possible! David Matthew Ezroj, Sweetmilkcoco, Raphaël LAURENT, Joe Meyers, Farah Abdelwahab, Brian Richards, Divina Grace Dar Santos, Jessie McGuire, Abdullah Altuwaijri, Sarah Burns, Clement, Hadi Salahshour, FAWWAZ GHUWAIDI, Dino Biancolini, Reagen O'Connor, Nicu Boanda, Cindy O., Karla Brilman, Jørgen Østerpart, Sergi Páez, rakesh Katragadda, Carolyn Corwin, Charlene You, Boris Langvand, Exal Enrique Cisneros Tuch, Carsten Tobehn, Kin Lon Ma, Katie Dean, Ezgi Yersu, Eunsun Kim, Katrina Harding, Gerald Onyango, alessandra tasso, Astia Rizki Safitri, Côme Vincent, Antony Lee, Melissa Sorrells, Rakshit Kothari, Doreen Reynolds-Consolati, Simon Holst Ravn, Manognya Chakrapani, Ayala Ron, Samantha Chow, Philippe Spoden, Phyllis Dubrow, Michelle Stevens-Stanford, Cas Jamieson, Ophelia Gibson Best, Amber Wood and Paul Schneider.
- published: 25 Jun 2019
- views: 1828329
5:09
2025 ዝም አለ (ZIM ALE) ሐምሌት በልጁን HAMLET BELJUN
ዝም አለ
ከፍ ከፍ ያልህ እግዚአብሔር፣
ኀይሌም ዝማሬዬም እግዚአብሔር፣
አንተ ተዋጊ ድል አድራጊ፣
እኔ መለከት ሥራህን ተራኪ።
የከፈትከውን ማንም አይዘጋ፣
ያልከውን ልትፈጽም የምትተጋ፣
“ተሻገሪ” አልህ ሆነህ አብረኸኝ፣
በራስህ ታምነህ እንድታደር...
ዝም አለ
ከፍ ከፍ ያልህ እግዚአብሔር፣
ኀይሌም ዝማሬዬም እግዚአብሔር፣
አንተ ተዋጊ ድል አድራጊ፣
እኔ መለከት ሥራህን ተራኪ።
የከፈትከውን ማንም አይዘጋ፣
ያልከውን ልትፈጽም የምትተጋ፣
“ተሻገሪ” አልህ ሆነህ አብረኸኝ፣
በራስህ ታምነህ እንድታደርሰኝ።
የተቤዠኸኝ እስከማልፍ ድረስ፣
ወዳየህልኝ እስክገሰግስ፣
አጥፍተህ እሳቱን፣ ነጥቀህ ጉልበቱን
ያላጠቃኝ ክንፍህ ጋርዶኝ።
ጠላቴ እንደ ድንጋይ ዝም አለ፤
ከሳሼ እንደ ድንጋይ ዝም አለ፤
እየዞረኝ ያላገኘኝ፣
ያንተ ምሕረት ስለ ከለለኝ።
አጥፍተህ እሳቱን፣ ነጥቀህ ጉልበቱን፣
ያላጠቃኝ ክንፍህ ጋርዶኝ።
ማንም ‘ማይደፍረው ቅጥሬ፤
አልፎ አማያጠቃኝ አጥሬ፤
ስምህ ጦሬ ነው ጋሻዬ፣
ከብበህ ‘ምትመራኝ ከለላዬ።
ከፍ ከፍ ያልህ እግዚአብሔር፣
ኀይሌም ዝማሬዬም እግዚአብሔር፣
አንተ ተዋጊ ድል አድራጊ፣
እኔ መለከት ሥራህን ተራኪ።
የኀይለኞችን ቀስት ሰብረሃል፤
ደካማዪቱን ኀይል አስታጥቀሃል፤
ከድጥ ጨለማ እግሬን ጠበቅህ፤
ያላንዳች እረዳት ብቻህን መራህ።
እንዴት ድንቅ ነው በአንተ መኖር!
እንዴት መታደል ሕዝብህ መሆን!
በክፉ የሚያይ ልጆችህን፣
እንደ ነካ ነው ብሌንህን።
ጠላቴ እንደ ድንጋይ ዝም አለ፤
ከሳሼ እንደ ድንጋይ ዝም አለ፤
እየዞረኝ ያላገኘኝ፣
ያንተ ምሕረት ስለ ከለለኝ።
አጥፍተህ እሳቱን፣ ነጥቀህ ጉልበቱን፣
ያላጠቃኝ ክንፍህ ጋርዶኝ።
ማንም ‘ማይደፍረው ቅጥሬ፤
አልፎ አማያጠቃኝ አጥሬ፤
ስምህ ጦሬ ነው ጋሻዬ፣
ከብበህ ‘ምትመራኝ ከለላዬ።
https://wn.com/2025_ዝም_አለ_(Zim_Ale)_ሐምሌት_በልጁን_Hamlet_Beljun
ዝም አለ
ከፍ ከፍ ያልህ እግዚአብሔር፣
ኀይሌም ዝማሬዬም እግዚአብሔር፣
አንተ ተዋጊ ድል አድራጊ፣
እኔ መለከት ሥራህን ተራኪ።
የከፈትከውን ማንም አይዘጋ፣
ያልከውን ልትፈጽም የምትተጋ፣
“ተሻገሪ” አልህ ሆነህ አብረኸኝ፣
በራስህ ታምነህ እንድታደርሰኝ።
የተቤዠኸኝ እስከማልፍ ድረስ፣
ወዳየህልኝ እስክገሰግስ፣
አጥፍተህ እሳቱን፣ ነጥቀህ ጉልበቱን
ያላጠቃኝ ክንፍህ ጋርዶኝ።
ጠላቴ እንደ ድንጋይ ዝም አለ፤
ከሳሼ እንደ ድንጋይ ዝም አለ፤
እየዞረኝ ያላገኘኝ፣
ያንተ ምሕረት ስለ ከለለኝ።
አጥፍተህ እሳቱን፣ ነጥቀህ ጉልበቱን፣
ያላጠቃኝ ክንፍህ ጋርዶኝ።
ማንም ‘ማይደፍረው ቅጥሬ፤
አልፎ አማያጠቃኝ አጥሬ፤
ስምህ ጦሬ ነው ጋሻዬ፣
ከብበህ ‘ምትመራኝ ከለላዬ።
ከፍ ከፍ ያልህ እግዚአብሔር፣
ኀይሌም ዝማሬዬም እግዚአብሔር፣
አንተ ተዋጊ ድል አድራጊ፣
እኔ መለከት ሥራህን ተራኪ።
የኀይለኞችን ቀስት ሰብረሃል፤
ደካማዪቱን ኀይል አስታጥቀሃል፤
ከድጥ ጨለማ እግሬን ጠበቅህ፤
ያላንዳች እረዳት ብቻህን መራህ።
እንዴት ድንቅ ነው በአንተ መኖር!
እንዴት መታደል ሕዝብህ መሆን!
በክፉ የሚያይ ልጆችህን፣
እንደ ነካ ነው ብሌንህን።
ጠላቴ እንደ ድንጋይ ዝም አለ፤
ከሳሼ እንደ ድንጋይ ዝም አለ፤
እየዞረኝ ያላገኘኝ፣
ያንተ ምሕረት ስለ ከለለኝ።
አጥፍተህ እሳቱን፣ ነጥቀህ ጉልበቱን፣
ያላጠቃኝ ክንፍህ ጋርዶኝ።
ማንም ‘ማይደፍረው ቅጥሬ፤
አልፎ አማያጠቃኝ አጥሬ፤
ስምህ ጦሬ ነው ጋሻዬ፣
ከብበህ ‘ምትመራኝ ከለላዬ።
- published: 05 Jan 2025
- views: 21549
2:33:28
Hamlet - Laurence Olivier - Shakespeare - 1948 - Multiple Subtitles - HD Restored - 4K
Subtitles: Français - Deutsch - Italiano - Português - Español - Hamlet 1948 - Adapted and Directed by Laurence Olivier
Laurence Olivier's Hamlet was made f...
Subtitles: Français - Deutsch - Italiano - Português - Español - Hamlet 1948 - Adapted and Directed by Laurence Olivier
Laurence Olivier's Hamlet was made four years after his rousingly patriotic Henry V (1944), and is a very different proposition. Unsurprisingly, given the tone and content of the play, the overall mood is that of brooding introspection - tellingly, in a phrase not in Shakespeare's original, Olivier opens by telling us that it is "the tragedy of a man who could not make up his mind", foregrounding the film's central theme, a neat metaphor for the uncertainty of the immediate postwar years.
He also largely eliminates the play's political intrigue: Fortinbras is banished, and so too are Rosencrantz and Guildenstern - the three characters most indelibly associated with the world outside Elsinore. These cuts focus attention on the play's central theme: the relationship between Hamlet, his lover Ophelia, mother Gertrude and stepfather Claudius.
Please consider subscribing to our channel for More Insights: https://www.youtube.com/user/ShakespeareNetwork?sub_confirmation=1
CAST
Hamlet - OLIVIER, Laurence
Gertrude - HERLIE, Eileen
Claudius - SYDNEY, Basil
Ophelia - SIMMONS, Jean
Polonius - AYLMER, Felix
Horatio - WOOLAND, Norman
Laertes - MORGAN, Terence
Gravedigger - HOLLOWAY, Stanley
Osric - CUSHING, Peter
Bernardo - KNIGHT, Esmond
Marcellus - QUAYLE, Anthony
First Player - WILLIAMS, Harcourt
Francisco - LAURIE, John
Sea Captain - MacGINNIS, Niall
Player King - TROUGHTON, Patrick
Player Queen - TARVER, Tony
Priest - THORNDIKE, Russell
Olivier was forty when he played the part, old by Hamlet standards, but a side-effect of this is to intensify the latent eroticism of the scenes with his mother, most notably following Polonius' murder, but also at the climax, when it's made clear that she knowingly drinks the poison to kill herself.
Stylistically, Hamlet is quite different from Henry V. Shot in high-contrast black and white, it's not quite as overtly Expressionist as, for instance, Orson Welles' Macbeth (also 1948), but it's certainly a similarly claustrophobic, stifling experience, with none of the opening-out of its predecessor, or any continuation of Olivier's explorations of the contrast between film and theatrical performance.
Although almost entirely filmed in the studio (the major exception being Ophelia's drowning, inspired by Millais' Pre-Raphaelite painting), the crane-mounted camera is constantly on the move, constantly shifting our perception of the characters' relationship with each other in a way that would be impossible with a stage production.
The following year Hamlet became not just the first British but the first non-American film to win the Oscar for Best Picture, along with Best Actor (Olivier), Best Art Direction and Best Costume Design.
Copyright - All rights reserved to their respective owners.
Read the unabridged plays online: https://shakespearenetwork.net/works/plays
_______________________________
Screen Adaptation - Co-Production : MISANTHROPOS – Official Website - https://www.misanthropos.net
Adapted by Maximianno Cobra, from Shakespeare's "Timon of Athens", the film exposes the timeless challenge of social hypocrisy, disillusion and annihilation against the poetics of friendship, love, and beauty.
_______________________________
FUNDRAISING CAMPAIGN - DONATIONS - Shakespeare Network Website and YouTube Channel:
Donate with PayPal or GoFundMe today:
Why Donate?
Please consider giving a donation today to support our HD AUDIO / IMAGE Restoration Program.
The main objective of enhancing historical image and sound recordings by digital signal processing is to improve the overall quality of recordings degraded by several distortions. Whether true signal restoration or merely signal enhancement can be achieved depends heavily on the quality of the historical image and sound material.
Image and audio restoration is an extremely time-consuming process that requires skilled audio and image engineers with specific experience in motion pictures, sound and music recording techniques as well as high-end hardware and software.
Donations to Shakespeare Network help sustain free knowledge and educational programs on Shakespeare Network and our ecosystem of Shakespeare Network projects. Your contributions ensure these resources remain accessible and valuable for all. Thank you.
Contact us for further info. Exclusive, New, Unique content uploads - fully re-edited-remastered. Educational Program. →
______________________________________
Shakespeare Network Educational Program:
- A Companion to Shakespeare -masterclasses, reviews, reactions, Academic Studies, historical and original audio-visual content, etc.
https://wn.com/Hamlet_Laurence_Olivier_Shakespeare_1948_Multiple_Subtitles_Hd_Restored_4K
Subtitles: Français - Deutsch - Italiano - Português - Español - Hamlet 1948 - Adapted and Directed by Laurence Olivier
Laurence Olivier's Hamlet was made four years after his rousingly patriotic Henry V (1944), and is a very different proposition. Unsurprisingly, given the tone and content of the play, the overall mood is that of brooding introspection - tellingly, in a phrase not in Shakespeare's original, Olivier opens by telling us that it is "the tragedy of a man who could not make up his mind", foregrounding the film's central theme, a neat metaphor for the uncertainty of the immediate postwar years.
He also largely eliminates the play's political intrigue: Fortinbras is banished, and so too are Rosencrantz and Guildenstern - the three characters most indelibly associated with the world outside Elsinore. These cuts focus attention on the play's central theme: the relationship between Hamlet, his lover Ophelia, mother Gertrude and stepfather Claudius.
Please consider subscribing to our channel for More Insights: https://www.youtube.com/user/ShakespeareNetwork?sub_confirmation=1
CAST
Hamlet - OLIVIER, Laurence
Gertrude - HERLIE, Eileen
Claudius - SYDNEY, Basil
Ophelia - SIMMONS, Jean
Polonius - AYLMER, Felix
Horatio - WOOLAND, Norman
Laertes - MORGAN, Terence
Gravedigger - HOLLOWAY, Stanley
Osric - CUSHING, Peter
Bernardo - KNIGHT, Esmond
Marcellus - QUAYLE, Anthony
First Player - WILLIAMS, Harcourt
Francisco - LAURIE, John
Sea Captain - MacGINNIS, Niall
Player King - TROUGHTON, Patrick
Player Queen - TARVER, Tony
Priest - THORNDIKE, Russell
Olivier was forty when he played the part, old by Hamlet standards, but a side-effect of this is to intensify the latent eroticism of the scenes with his mother, most notably following Polonius' murder, but also at the climax, when it's made clear that she knowingly drinks the poison to kill herself.
Stylistically, Hamlet is quite different from Henry V. Shot in high-contrast black and white, it's not quite as overtly Expressionist as, for instance, Orson Welles' Macbeth (also 1948), but it's certainly a similarly claustrophobic, stifling experience, with none of the opening-out of its predecessor, or any continuation of Olivier's explorations of the contrast between film and theatrical performance.
Although almost entirely filmed in the studio (the major exception being Ophelia's drowning, inspired by Millais' Pre-Raphaelite painting), the crane-mounted camera is constantly on the move, constantly shifting our perception of the characters' relationship with each other in a way that would be impossible with a stage production.
The following year Hamlet became not just the first British but the first non-American film to win the Oscar for Best Picture, along with Best Actor (Olivier), Best Art Direction and Best Costume Design.
Copyright - All rights reserved to their respective owners.
Read the unabridged plays online: https://shakespearenetwork.net/works/plays
_______________________________
Screen Adaptation - Co-Production : MISANTHROPOS – Official Website - https://www.misanthropos.net
Adapted by Maximianno Cobra, from Shakespeare's "Timon of Athens", the film exposes the timeless challenge of social hypocrisy, disillusion and annihilation against the poetics of friendship, love, and beauty.
_______________________________
FUNDRAISING CAMPAIGN - DONATIONS - Shakespeare Network Website and YouTube Channel:
Donate with PayPal or GoFundMe today:
Why Donate?
Please consider giving a donation today to support our HD AUDIO / IMAGE Restoration Program.
The main objective of enhancing historical image and sound recordings by digital signal processing is to improve the overall quality of recordings degraded by several distortions. Whether true signal restoration or merely signal enhancement can be achieved depends heavily on the quality of the historical image and sound material.
Image and audio restoration is an extremely time-consuming process that requires skilled audio and image engineers with specific experience in motion pictures, sound and music recording techniques as well as high-end hardware and software.
Donations to Shakespeare Network help sustain free knowledge and educational programs on Shakespeare Network and our ecosystem of Shakespeare Network projects. Your contributions ensure these resources remain accessible and valuable for all. Thank you.
Contact us for further info. Exclusive, New, Unique content uploads - fully re-edited-remastered. Educational Program. →
______________________________________
Shakespeare Network Educational Program:
- A Companion to Shakespeare -masterclasses, reviews, reactions, Academic Studies, historical and original audio-visual content, etc.
- published: 09 May 2021
- views: 764457
12:24
Ghosts, Murder, and More Murder - Hamlet Part 1: Crash Course Literature 203
In which John Green teaches you about Hamlet, William Shakespeare's longest and most-performed play. People love Hamlet. The play that is, not necessarily the c...
In which John Green teaches you about Hamlet, William Shakespeare's longest and most-performed play. People love Hamlet. The play that is, not necessarily the character. Hamlet is a Tragedy with a capital T (I guess I don't have to point that out since you can see clearly in the text that the T was capitalized). By Tragedy, I mean virtually everyone dies at the end. John will talk a little bit about the history of the play and the different versions of it that have appeared in the centuries since it was written. You'll also learn about some of the big themes in the play, get a brief plot overview, and the all-important connections between Prince Hamlet and Simba, the Lion King. Seriously though, The Lion King is totally just a Hamlet musical with animals instead of people.
Consider supporting local bookstores by purchasing your books through our Bookshop affiliate link https://bookshop.org/shop/complexly or at your local bookseller.
Crash Course is on Patreon! You can support us directly by signing up at http://www.patreon.com/crashcourse
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CC Kids: http://www.youtube.com/crashcoursekids
https://wn.com/Ghosts,_Murder,_And_More_Murder_Hamlet_Part_1_Crash_Course_Literature_203
In which John Green teaches you about Hamlet, William Shakespeare's longest and most-performed play. People love Hamlet. The play that is, not necessarily the character. Hamlet is a Tragedy with a capital T (I guess I don't have to point that out since you can see clearly in the text that the T was capitalized). By Tragedy, I mean virtually everyone dies at the end. John will talk a little bit about the history of the play and the different versions of it that have appeared in the centuries since it was written. You'll also learn about some of the big themes in the play, get a brief plot overview, and the all-important connections between Prince Hamlet and Simba, the Lion King. Seriously though, The Lion King is totally just a Hamlet musical with animals instead of people.
Consider supporting local bookstores by purchasing your books through our Bookshop affiliate link https://bookshop.org/shop/complexly or at your local bookseller.
Crash Course is on Patreon! You can support us directly by signing up at http://www.patreon.com/crashcourse
Want to find Crash Course elsewhere on the internet?
Facebook - http://www.facebook.com/YouTubeCrashCourse
Twitter - http://www.twitter.com/TheCrashCourse
Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/thecrashcourse/
CC Kids: http://www.youtube.com/crashcoursekids
- published: 14 Mar 2014
- views: 2480141
2:40:18
Hamlet
http://www.bju.edu -
Directed by Paul Radford
Set and Costume Design by Jeffrey Stegall
Lighting design by Richard Streeter
DIRECTOR’S NOTES
Hamlet has playe...
http://www.bju.edu -
Directed by Paul Radford
Set and Costume Design by Jeffrey Stegall
Lighting design by Richard Streeter
DIRECTOR’S NOTES
Hamlet has played an important role in the history of Shakespearean performance at BJU. It was first performed in 1932 at the original campus in College Point, Florida. The production was so well received that the Classic Players took it on tour to several cities in Florida and
Alabama. In 1933 Hamlet was the inaugural Classic Players production in Cleveland, Tennessee, the institution’s second home, where both players and play received a warm welcome.
Happily, Shakespeare designed the play with enough intriguing interpretative issues to keep any director and cast from reducing it to a “definitive” version. Classic Players’ productions of Hamlet have been set in several different eras, including the early Renaissance and Cavalier periods. As the 1948 program suggests, “The spirit of the play knows no limit of time or place, but is universal.”
Our current costume and set designs pay homage to the first Greenville production of Hamlet in 1948. The style is predominantly Byzantine, with glimmering color and lurking shadows, suggesting a period of opulence masking political turmoil and intrigue. The features of the set lack symmetry as the Royal Palace at Elsinore is seemingly “out of joint.” There is something “rotten in the state of Denmark,” and a reign that appears legitimate and strong already shows sign of decay.
Our Hamlet is focused on the essential moral truth at the heart of the play: the violation of one’s conscience will bring the justice of divine retribution. We follow the journey of a young man of integrity who is transformed into a “scourge” of God when he violates his own conscience in rashly killing an “unseen good old man.” Additionally, we follow the reverse journey of a murderous king who unintentionally reveals a blackened, guilty conscience before the eyes of his court. But in the case of Hamlet, Shakespeare also suggests the positive truth that Providence can enable a person to repent and correct his course, turn away from evil, and even become the instrument of its defeat.
A modern audience may not easily identify with the plight of a Danish prince called on by a tortured ghost to kill a villainous king. However, we can all relate to the human drama of a moral person faced with the ultimate question of his personal responsibility to right the wrongs in the society around him. We all must face the question, “What is the right thing to do about evil?” Viewed in this way, we see in Hamlet a mirror image of our own temptations and frailties.
https://wn.com/Hamlet
http://www.bju.edu -
Directed by Paul Radford
Set and Costume Design by Jeffrey Stegall
Lighting design by Richard Streeter
DIRECTOR’S NOTES
Hamlet has played an important role in the history of Shakespearean performance at BJU. It was first performed in 1932 at the original campus in College Point, Florida. The production was so well received that the Classic Players took it on tour to several cities in Florida and
Alabama. In 1933 Hamlet was the inaugural Classic Players production in Cleveland, Tennessee, the institution’s second home, where both players and play received a warm welcome.
Happily, Shakespeare designed the play with enough intriguing interpretative issues to keep any director and cast from reducing it to a “definitive” version. Classic Players’ productions of Hamlet have been set in several different eras, including the early Renaissance and Cavalier periods. As the 1948 program suggests, “The spirit of the play knows no limit of time or place, but is universal.”
Our current costume and set designs pay homage to the first Greenville production of Hamlet in 1948. The style is predominantly Byzantine, with glimmering color and lurking shadows, suggesting a period of opulence masking political turmoil and intrigue. The features of the set lack symmetry as the Royal Palace at Elsinore is seemingly “out of joint.” There is something “rotten in the state of Denmark,” and a reign that appears legitimate and strong already shows sign of decay.
Our Hamlet is focused on the essential moral truth at the heart of the play: the violation of one’s conscience will bring the justice of divine retribution. We follow the journey of a young man of integrity who is transformed into a “scourge” of God when he violates his own conscience in rashly killing an “unseen good old man.” Additionally, we follow the reverse journey of a murderous king who unintentionally reveals a blackened, guilty conscience before the eyes of his court. But in the case of Hamlet, Shakespeare also suggests the positive truth that Providence can enable a person to repent and correct his course, turn away from evil, and even become the instrument of its defeat.
A modern audience may not easily identify with the plight of a Danish prince called on by a tortured ghost to kill a villainous king. However, we can all relate to the human drama of a moral person faced with the ultimate question of his personal responsibility to right the wrongs in the society around him. We all must face the question, “What is the right thing to do about evil?” Viewed in this way, we see in Hamlet a mirror image of our own temptations and frailties.
- published: 30 Mar 2020
- views: 1227284
13:15
Shakespeare Summarized: Hamlet
Well, this one is longer than the last one, but in fairness it's 2000% shorter than the actual movie.
Continuing the trend, this video summarizes THE TRAGEDIE ...
Well, this one is longer than the last one, but in fairness it's 2000% shorter than the actual movie.
Continuing the trend, this video summarizes THE TRAGEDIE OF HAMLET PRINCE OF DENMARK, commonly known as Hamlet.
Goodness, he really is a whiner, isn't he? And he's supposed to be the sympathetic character!
Note: This is the second version of Hamlet Summarized, because I made the mistake of using a copyrighted song in the last one. Oops.
UPDATE: Julius Caesar Summarized is up! Watch it at http://youtu.be/4e3Y80hUfIQ
https://wn.com/Shakespeare_Summarized_Hamlet
Well, this one is longer than the last one, but in fairness it's 2000% shorter than the actual movie.
Continuing the trend, this video summarizes THE TRAGEDIE OF HAMLET PRINCE OF DENMARK, commonly known as Hamlet.
Goodness, he really is a whiner, isn't he? And he's supposed to be the sympathetic character!
Note: This is the second version of Hamlet Summarized, because I made the mistake of using a copyrighted song in the last one. Oops.
UPDATE: Julius Caesar Summarized is up! Watch it at http://youtu.be/4e3Y80hUfIQ
- published: 19 Apr 2013
- views: 1264866
17:20
„Hamlet" W. Szekspir - streszczenie i opracowanie w pigułce #matura #matura2021 #język polski
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Hej, Kochani!
🔹Mój kurs on...
UWAGA! Tylko do 15.01⏰ możesz zgarnąć kurs maturalny 2025 w PROMOCJI i złapać BONUS🤌 Sprawdź👉
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Dziś przychodzę do Was ze streszczeniem i opracowaniem „Hamleta”. Jestem otwarta na wszelkie Wasze uwagi, uzupełnienia i pytania:) Razem twórzmy społeczność Pracowni Literackiej.
Plan odcinka:
00:00 - 1:16 Wstęp
1:17 - 2:42 O autorze
2:43 - 4:40 Informacje ogólne (gatunek, miejsce akcji)
4:41 - 7:08 Bohaterowie
7:09 - 11:45 Streszczenie
11:46 - 13:35 Najważniejsze cytaty
13:36 - 16:35 Motywy literackie
16:36 Pożegnanie
NEWSLETTER - regulamin i informacje
- Notatki wysyłam w środowe wieczory i dotyczą one ostatniego opublikowanego na YT filmu - jeżeli zapisujesz się się na newsletter np. w czwartek, to musisz poczekać do kolejnej środy na nowe materiały:)
- Treści są dostępne tylko dla zapisanych osób - nie przekazujemy ich nikomu
- Nie istnieje możliość otrzymania poprzednich notatek inną drogą niż poprzez zakup w sklepie - nie wysyłam ich na indywidualne prośby i Was też o to proszę
- Link do notatek staje się nieaktywny w piątek o 20.00, dlatego warto zapisać notatki na swoim komputerze
Wpadajcie do mnie na Insta i dawajcie znać, jakie filmy chcecie oglądać:)
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mail: kontakt@pracownialiteracka.pl
strona: http://bitly.pl/tOonL
Music by Mr. Chase - "Wild Cherry" - https://thmatc.co/?l=4AF0E07B
Dokładam wszelkich starań, aby moje filmy przekazywały wartościowe treści. Wiedza, która się w nich pojawia, musi być jednak skracana. Jeżeli czegoś z filmu nie rozumiesz, to dopytaj o to w komentarzu. Uzupełniaj także swoją wiedzę korzystając z innych źródeł:)
#matura2021 #matura
#matura2022 #językpolski #nauka #liceum #technikum
https://wn.com/„Hamlet_W._Szekspir_Streszczenie_I_Opracowanie_W_Pigułce_Matura_Matura2021_Język_Polski
UWAGA! Tylko do 15.01⏰ możesz zgarnąć kurs maturalny 2025 w PROMOCJI i złapać BONUS🤌 Sprawdź👉
https://oferta.kursydomatury.pl/polski/
Hej, Kochani!
🔹Mój kurs online - https://bit.ly/3ilDHSp
Zachęcam Was do pobrania BEZPŁATNEJ lekcji próbnej z Biblii i przetestowania kursu.
🔹Notatki z lektur ogwiazdkowanych: https://notatkidomatury.pl/
🔹Materiały do dzisiejszego filmu prześlę ZA DARMO do osób zapisanych na mój newsletter. Zapisać można się ➡tutaj: http://pracownialiteracka.pl/kontakti...
Dziś przychodzę do Was ze streszczeniem i opracowaniem „Hamleta”. Jestem otwarta na wszelkie Wasze uwagi, uzupełnienia i pytania:) Razem twórzmy społeczność Pracowni Literackiej.
Plan odcinka:
00:00 - 1:16 Wstęp
1:17 - 2:42 O autorze
2:43 - 4:40 Informacje ogólne (gatunek, miejsce akcji)
4:41 - 7:08 Bohaterowie
7:09 - 11:45 Streszczenie
11:46 - 13:35 Najważniejsze cytaty
13:36 - 16:35 Motywy literackie
16:36 Pożegnanie
NEWSLETTER - regulamin i informacje
- Notatki wysyłam w środowe wieczory i dotyczą one ostatniego opublikowanego na YT filmu - jeżeli zapisujesz się się na newsletter np. w czwartek, to musisz poczekać do kolejnej środy na nowe materiały:)
- Treści są dostępne tylko dla zapisanych osób - nie przekazujemy ich nikomu
- Nie istnieje możliość otrzymania poprzednich notatek inną drogą niż poprzez zakup w sklepie - nie wysyłam ich na indywidualne prośby i Was też o to proszę
- Link do notatek staje się nieaktywny w piątek o 20.00, dlatego warto zapisać notatki na swoim komputerze
Wpadajcie do mnie na Insta i dawajcie znać, jakie filmy chcecie oglądać:)
Insta: http://bitly.pl/NqeKv
FB: http://bitly.pl/HyeLS
mail: kontakt@pracownialiteracka.pl
strona: http://bitly.pl/tOonL
Music by Mr. Chase - "Wild Cherry" - https://thmatc.co/?l=4AF0E07B
Dokładam wszelkich starań, aby moje filmy przekazywały wartościowe treści. Wiedza, która się w nich pojawia, musi być jednak skracana. Jeżeli czegoś z filmu nie rozumiesz, to dopytaj o to w komentarzu. Uzupełniaj także swoją wiedzę korzystając z innych źródeł:)
#matura2021 #matura
#matura2022 #językpolski #nauka #liceum #technikum
- published: 04 Oct 2020
- views: 91657
1:42
Hamlet (1990) Official Trailer - Mel Gibson, Glenn Close Movie HD
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Hamlet (1990) Official Trailer - Mel Gibson, Glenn Close Movie HD
Hamlet, Prince of Denmark, finds out that his uncle Claudius killed his father to obtain the throne, and plans revenge.
Welcome to the Fandango MOVIECLIPS Trailer Vault Channel. Where trailers from the past, from recent to long ago, from a time before YouTube, can be enjoyed by all. We search near and far for original movie trailer from all decades. Feel free to send us your trailer requests and we will do our best to hunt it down.
https://wn.com/Hamlet_(1990)_Official_Trailer_Mel_Gibson,_Glenn_Close_Movie_Hd
Subscribe to CLASSIC TRAILERS: http://bit.ly/1u43jDe
Subscribe to TRAILERS: http://bit.ly/sxaw6h
Subscribe to COMING SOON: http://bit.ly/H2vZUn
Like us on FACEBOOK: http://goo.gl/dHs73
Follow us on TWITTER: http://bit.ly/1ghOWmt
Hamlet (1990) Official Trailer - Mel Gibson, Glenn Close Movie HD
Hamlet, Prince of Denmark, finds out that his uncle Claudius killed his father to obtain the throne, and plans revenge.
Welcome to the Fandango MOVIECLIPS Trailer Vault Channel. Where trailers from the past, from recent to long ago, from a time before YouTube, can be enjoyed by all. We search near and far for original movie trailer from all decades. Feel free to send us your trailer requests and we will do our best to hunt it down.
- published: 08 Aug 2014
- views: 497923