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 Pretty3
 
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							| Hi 
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							| Hi,   I have read the summary of The Merchant of Venice .   The characters are written in this way: Mackbeth , wife Lady Macbeth.      How can we use the word Lady ?? Can we use it before any husband �s name ??     Best Regards, :) |  28 Feb 2011      
					
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 britishschwa
 
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							| Hellooooooooo hellooo! 
 ..."Lady" is also the customary title of the wife of a baronet or knight, but in this case with neither the article nor Christian name: "Lady" with the surname of the husband only, Sir John and Lady Smith. When a woman divorces a knight and he marries again, the new wife will be Lady Smith while the ex-wife becomes Jane, Lady Smith.
 
 |  28 Feb 2011     
					
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 libertybelle
 
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							| No, you can �t. Lady is her title.
 Macbeth is a general and a thane which is a freeman granted land by the king in return for his military service.  I don �t know if that title still exists, but Lady Di was a Lady because she belonged to royalty in some way or another.
 Other classes were called Mister, Master and Mrs.
 Today a Lady goes by her first name - Lady Di etc.
 Perhaps in the old days they went by their husband �s first or last name.
 Most often the title of Lady went with the man�s title of Lord.
 Like a dukes and duchess - baron and baroness - prince and princess. etc.
 
 |  28 Feb 2011     
					
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 Pretty3
 
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							| Thanks a lot for your explanations |  28 Feb 2011     
					
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 almaz
 
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							| �Lady Muck � is the name given in the UK to a pretentious woman who swanks around full of airs and graces and thinks she �s better than everyone else. 
 (I think it �s also a Kiwi vacuum cleaner - which is funny as well as different and noice) |  28 Feb 2011     
					
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