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The one and only... Miss Catherine Tate! [applause]
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I can't believe we've got double English
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[sigh] English is well dry!
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I don't see what's so great about readin anyways!
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No, readin's for LOSERS! [laughter]
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Innit though?? [sucks teeth] At least we've got a new teacher today.
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Yeah right, that'll be a laugh, won't it?
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[door opens] [cheers and applause]
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Morning!
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Alright [laughter]
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As I'm sure you're aware, my name is Mr Logan, I'm your new English teacher, nice to meet you all.
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Hope you're all ready to get to grips with some Elizabethan literature!
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Let's all turn to page 53 in our poetry textbooks
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I think we'll dive straight in with the Bard himself.
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Sir?
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Yeah?
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Are you English, sir?
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No, I'm Scottish.
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So you ain't English, then?
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No, I'm British.
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So you ain't English, then?
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No, I'm not, but as you can see... I do speak English.
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But I can't understand what you're saying, sir. [laughter]
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Well, clearly you can.
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Sorry, are you talking Scottish now? [laughter]
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No, I'm talking English.
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Right. Don't sound like it! [laughter]
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OK, whatever you want. Now! Let's get on with Shakespeare.
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I don't think you're qualified to teach us English!
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I am perfectly qualified to teach English.
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I don't think you are, though.
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You don't have to BE English to teach it.
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Right, have we got double English, or double Scottish? [laughter]
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Is your name Lauren Cooper, by any chance?
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Yeah. [laughter]
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Why?
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Your reputation precedes you.
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Innit though?! [laughter]
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So, Shakespeare's sonnets!
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Sir?
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A sonnet is a poem
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Sir?
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- Written in 40 lines - Sir?
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- the last two of which - Sir?
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- must form a rhyming couplet - Sir?
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Sir?
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Yes, Lauren?
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Can I aks you a question?
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Not just now.
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Can I aks you a question, though?
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Just wait.
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But can I just aks you a question? I only want to aks you a question. Can't I aks you a question? I'm just aksing you a question. Can't I aksk you a question?
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What is it?
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Are you the Doctor? [laughter]
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[cheering, applause]
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Doctor who?
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Innit though?! [cheering, applause]
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I dunno what you're talking about.
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You look like Doctor Who, though!
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I'm not Doctor Who, I'm your English teacher!
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I don't think you are, though.
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Lauren...
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I think you're a 945-year-old Time Lord! [laughter]
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Listen...
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Did you just pitch up from Mars?
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Don't be ridiculous.
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- You know your house, right? - What?
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- You know your house? - Yeah?
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Is it bigger on the inside? [laughter]
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Be quiet!
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Have you parked the Tardis on a meter?
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Can we please get back to Shakespeare?
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[sucks teeth]
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Thank you!
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So...
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Do you fancy Billie Piper, sir?
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Right. [laughter, applause]
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You are the most insolent child I have ever had the misfortune to teach.
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Thank you. [laughter]
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You are pointless, repetitious and extremely dull.
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Bit like Shakespeare. [laughter]
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You're not even worthy to mention his name.
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William Shake - William Shakespeare was a genius. You, little madam, are definitely not.
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Now just sit there, keep your mouth shut, or I will fail you in this whole module right now.
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[sucks teeth]
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[laughter]
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Amest I bovver-ed?
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[laughter, applause]
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What?
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Amest I bovver-ed, forsooth?
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Lauren...
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Looketh at my face!
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- I don't... - Looketh at my face!
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- Stop it. - Ist this a bovver-ed face thou seest before thee?
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Right, I'm calling your parents.
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Are you disrespecting the house of Cooper?
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Art though calling my mother a pox-ridden wench?
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No.
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- Art thou calling my father a goodly rotten apple? - Lauren... [laughter]
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- But he ain't even a goodly rotten apple. - Listen to me...
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- But he aint even a goodly rotten apple, though. - That's enough.
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- Face-eth! - Lauren...
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- Bovver-ed? - Lauren...
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- Look at it! My liege! - Stop! That's it!
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- My liege! My liege! My liege! - No! Stop!
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- Face-eth! Bovver-ed! Face-eth! - Now! Stop!
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- You take the high road and I'll take the low road. - That's it!
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I ain't even bovvered! [laughter]
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I ain't even bovvered! Look! Face! Bovvered! Face!
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Bovver-ed, face, bovver-ed, I ain't even bovver-ed, my liege!
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I be not bovver-ed, forsooth, I be not bovver-ed, face, bovvered, I ain't even bovvered.
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Face, bovvered, Shakespeare, sonnets, I ain't even bovvered.
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My mistress' eyes are nuffin' like the sun
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Coral is far more red than her lips red
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If snow be white, why then her breasts are dun
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If hair be wires, black wires grow on her head
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I have seen roses damask, red and white
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But no such roses see I in her cheeks
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And in some perfume is there more delight
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Than in the breath that from my mistress reeks
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I love to hear her speak yet well I know that music have a far more pleasing sound
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I grant I never saw a goddess go. My mistress when she walks treads on the ground
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And yet, by Heaven, I think my love as rare
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As any she belies with false compare.
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[slams desk] Bite me, alien boi!
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[cheers, applause]
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[electronic humming]
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[pulsing]
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[cheering, applause]
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That's better! [laughter]
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A rose by any other name would smell as sweet! [laughter, groans]
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(high-pitched) I still ain't bovvered! [laughter]
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[applause, cheering]