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This is an incorrect quotation. The words "you" and "me" are not interchangeable, as you can clearly see in the sentence "I would like to see my wages paid to you." as opposed to "I would like to see my wages paid to me."

The correct quotation appears in Henry IV Part 2, Act 2, Scene 1. Hostess Quickly comments "He hath eaten me out of house and home, he hath put all my substance into that fat belly of his: but I will have some of it out again, or I will ride thee a-nights like the mare." She is referring, of course, to Falstaff.

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13y ago
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13y ago

You have misquoted. The correct quotation is "He hath eaten ME out of house and home." Henry IV Part 2. Mistress Quickly says it about Falstaff, who is staying at her house but never pays the bill. She owns the house herself, and it is only she who suffers therefore it is very wrong to substitute "us" for "me".

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9y ago

William Shakespeare was a playwright and actor, he is widely regarded as the best writer in the English language. This quote is from Shakespeare's play Henry IV Part 2.

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11y ago

Mistress Quickly says it in Henry IV Part II about Falstaff.

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6y ago

Henry IV Part 2. Mistress Quickly says it about Falstaff.

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11y ago

Henry IV Part II, Act 2, Scene 1

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Q: Which Shakespeare play has the phrase 'he hath eaten me out of house and home'?
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Which of William Shakespeare's plays does the phrase 'he hath eaten you out of house and home' come from?

None. The phrase 'He hath eaten me out of house and home" is from Henry IV Part 2 Act 2 Scene 1


'He hath eaten me out of house and home' Shakespeare?

This phrase from Shakespeare's play "Henry IV, Part 2" is used to express frustration about someone eating all the food in the house and leaving nothing behind. The character is exaggerating to highlight how much food has been consumed.


He hath eaten you out of your house and home?

This is an incorrect quotation. The words "you" and "me" are not interchangeable, as you can clearly see in the sentence "I would like to see my wages paid to you." as opposed to "I would like to see my wages paid to me." The correct quotation is "He hath eaten me out of house and home", and it comes from Act II of Shakespeare's Henry IV, Part 2.


How did Shakespeare say the word 'has'?

Hath.


What does he hath eaten you out of house and home mean?

This is an incorrect quotation. The words "you" and "me" are not interchangeable, as you can clearly see in the sentence "I would like to see my wages paid to you." as opposed to "I would like to see my wages paid to me." The correct quotation is "he hath eaten me out of house and home." Mistress Quickly, in Shakespeare's play, Henry IV Part 2, is an innkeeper saddled with the unfortunate guest Sir John Falstaff, who never pays his bill. He is hugely fat and eats like a horse, so he is bankrupting her, which is what she means when she says this.


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Where in the bible do you find pursue God Passionately?

I do not remember these words, but it was said of Jesus, after he had driven the money changers from the temple: The zeal of thine house hath eaten me up. (John 2.17)


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This phrase occurs once in Joshua in the KJV Bible: For the LORD hath driven out from before you great nations and strong: but as for you, no man hath been able to stand before you unto this day (Joshua 23.9)


What a day God hath wrought Did someone coin this phrase or am I thinking of just What hath God wrought?

You are thinking of "What hath God Wrought", it was the first telegraph ever made by Samuel Morse, creator of the telegraph and Morse Code.


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In the King James version...Dan 4:2 I thought it good to shew the signs and wonders that the high God hath wrought toward me.... is the only verse with the phrase - God hath wrought - in it.


What was the first Morse code message sent in 1844?

What hath God wrought - it's a phrase from the Bible