Nobody says this. The quotation is "What man art thou, thus bescreened in night, so stumblest upon my counsel." The Wikianswers rule about using the word "my" in questions does not apply to quotations like "We the people" or "stumblest upon my counsel." See the related question.
Identify himself. "What man art thou, who, thus bescreened by night, so stumblest on my counsel?" Or, in other words, "Who the heck are you and what are you doing eavesdropping in my garden?"
From Romeo and Juliet, Act II Scene 2, the balcony scene. Juliet cannot see Romeo; she says he is "bescreen'd in night." "Bescreen'd" is the same word as "bescreened"; the apostrophe tells us that the word is to be pronounced in two syllables not in three, "be-screend" not "be-screen-ned". You know what it means to screen something, don't you? You put something in front of it so it can't be seen. You do the screening and it gets screened. Or you can use the prefix "be" which means the same thing. If you deck something with flowers, the thing covered in flowers is "bedecked". So here is Romeo, who is hidden behind, or screened by, the night or in other words, he is bescreened by the night.
It mean what you don't what does it mean.
Mean is the average.
What does GRI mean? What does GRI mean?
The haudensaunee mean irguios
The correct usage is "what DOES it mean"
he was a mean person who lived with mean people in a mean castle on a mean hill in a mean country in a mean continent in a mean world in a mean solar system in a mean galaxy in a mean universe in a mean dimension
No, but sometimes "average" means "mean" - when it doesn't mean median, geometric mean, or something else entirely.
He is as mean as a copperhead snakeHe is as mean as an angry bearHe is as mean as a bottle of brandyHe is as mean a black woman
Present - I mean, She means. Future - I will mean, She will mean. Past - Meant.