The phrase "The lady doth protest too much, methinks" comes from Shakespeare's play "Hamlet." It suggests that someone who is overly vocal in denying something may actually be guilty of it. In essence, excessive denial can imply the opposite of what is being asserted, hinting at insincerity or hidden truth. The line reflects the idea that those who are defensive often draw more suspicion than those who remain calm.
it means that the lady is arguing to much
This is a misquotation of Gertude's line in Hamlet, "The lady doth protest too much, methinks." She is watching a play in which a woman swears up and down she will never remarry and does so immediately on her husband's death. The line is ironic since Gertrude herself did exactly what the woman in the play did. The line has come to be quoted (or as often or not, misquoted) to describe someone who is a little too insistent, and so is not believable.
It is an obsolete form of the word 'do', namely third-person present tense. One well known example is 'The lady doth protest too much', from Shakespeare's play Hamlet. It has been replaced with "does" since Shakespeare's day.
"Methinks" means "I think". So the sentence means "I think I see my cousin's ghost."
"doth" means "does", "perplex" means "confuse". ecstacy does confuse or bewilder.
This line likely refers to a lady who enhances the status or reputation of a specific knight through her beauty, charm, or noble qualities. It suggests that the lady is seen as valuable or worthy of admiration by others due to her association with the knight.
"Methinks" is an archaic way of saying "I think" or "I believe." In Romeo and Juliet, Shakespeare uses this phrase to convey a character's thoughts or opinions.
In middle English the verb "to do" was conjugated as follows: I do Thou doest He doeth or she doeth We do You do They do In Early Modern English, "doeth" became "doth" and eventually "does"
Yes. Object as a verb can mean to protest.
It doesn't mean anything. Carroll deliberately wrote it as nonsense. It's a parody of the morality poem 'How doth the little busy bee' by Isaac Watts.
your fat
If you mean PROTIST, then no.