theres only one and thats mine
Shakespeare only uses this word in one play, Macbeth, and then almost always in the phrase "weird sisters", although there is one "weird women". The reason is that "weird" was not a word used in Shakespeare's time at all, except in the phrase "weird sisters", which referred to the characters in mythology, the Fates. "Weird Sisters" were women who could tell or determine the Fate of others, as indeed the witches do in Macbeth. In Middle English a weard was a prophecy or prophet. The word "weird" used in anything but this specialized sense has arisen since entirely and exclusively because of Shakespeare's use of it.
Banquo says that to Macbeth in Act 2, Scene 1, Line 20.
Banquo: I dreamt last night of the three weird sisters. To you they have shown some truth. Macbeth: I think not of them.
He's a weird cat why wouldn't he be weird
The quote is said by one of the weird sisters in the play Macbeth as they brew up evil spirits and invite Hecate to attend, in anticipation of Macbeth's desperate arrival to hear his fate from them. Macbeth finds the weird sisters in a cave and he immediately sees that they are doing something unearthly and greets them with "How now you black and secret midnight hags?". Means > I greet you, what are you doing evil women? One of the weird sisters replies to him, " ...a deed without a name". This means that they are meddling with unearthly spirits and evil of the most unearthly kind. A deed (act) which is SO evil that it has no words or earthly definition to describe it. It is beyond evil, beyond earthly good and evil. It is evil and madness beyond any human comprehension and even beyond words or description. A deed without a name.
The Three Weird Sisters was created in 1948.
The duration of The Three Weird Sisters is 1.37 hours.
Author of The weird sisters wrote 'Waldeck Abbey.'
there just weird
they are the 3 weird sisters
The witches in Macbeth refer to themselves as the "weird sisters."
Curses
They are called "weird sisters". "Weird" actually meant "knowing" which explains why they know about the future.
Shakespeare only uses this word in one play, Macbeth, and then almost always in the phrase "weird sisters", although there is one "weird women". The reason is that "weird" was not a word used in Shakespeare's time at all, except in the phrase "weird sisters", which referred to the characters in mythology, the Fates. "Weird Sisters" were women who could tell or determine the Fate of others, as indeed the witches do in Macbeth. In Middle English a weard was a prophecy or prophet. The word "weird" used in anything but this specialized sense has arisen since entirely and exclusively because of Shakespeare's use of it.
The Weird Sisters
The Weird Sisters.
Why do U want to know these weird questions????