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Venom Snake Posted 6 years ago
Grammar

The king in the north

Hello. I believe I've asked this sort of question once before, a question derived from GOT literature. My question is, is "The king in the north" which in my opinion means "The king of the north" or possibly "The king who rules the north" derived from real English literature/history or is it just a GOT thing? As for the context, you can hear people referring to the northern kings such as "Jon Snow" or "Rob Start" in a lot of GOT episodes, well to be more specific, you can refer to episode 3 of season 7.

  

Top answer

You say "literature", but then you say "episodes". There are novels, but you mean screenplays. I'm not sure you can call screenplays literature, but maybe Shakespeare would disagree.

  • You say "literature", but then you say "episodes".
  • There are novels, but you mean screenplays.
  • I'm not sure you can call screenplays literature, but maybe Shakespeare would disagree.
  • Anyway, more context would make it possible to give you an answer to your question.
  • I don't want to skip through an episode on YT to look for the phrase.
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1 Answers
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You say "literature", but then you say "episodes". There are novels, but you mean screenplays. I'm not sure you can call screenplays literature, but maybe Shakespeare would disagree. Anyway, more context would make it possible to give you an answer to your question. I don't want to skip through an episode on YT to look for the phrase.

In the TV show, the North is a geographical region an

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