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To be or not to be... Now, what is the question?

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Originally posted by anthranilate
To be or not to be... Now, what is the question?
The category is Shakespeare!
And the answer is: "To be or not to be..."
The question is "What is - eh - what Hamlet said when he had the skull in his hand?"

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Originally posted by anthranilate
To be or not to be... Now, what is the question?
"what is the question?"

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Originally posted by anthranilate
To be or not to be... Now, what is the question?
Do you want it in the original Klingon?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Klingon_Hamlet

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"To be or not to be!"
Ok, asuming this is the answer and you are looking for the question ;-)
So, the answer is a tautology, so the question can be nearly everything.
The best question for this answer was given from Pontius Pilatus:
"What is truth?"

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Originally posted by FabianFnas
The category is Shakespeare!
And the answer is: "To be or not to be..."
The question is "What is - eh - what Hamlet said when he had the skull in his hand?"
The answer is "Alas, Poor Yorick!"

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Which primary class broke the window in the playground?

Was it....2B or not 2B?

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My school room was 2B...

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Originally posted by anthranilate
To be or not to be... Now, what is the question?
What are the only two choices existence has left you with?

(Anti-Cartesians are hypocrites. Stop thinking and you will find yourself "not to be."-)

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Originally posted by nihilismor
What are the only two choices existence has left you with?

(Anti-Cartesians are hypocrites. Stop thinking and you will find yourself "not to be."-)
How can you find yourself when you are "not to be"? Who's finding who?

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"What" is the question.

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Originally posted by clandarkfire
"What" is the question.
The question was "whether 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune, or to take arms against a sea of troubles and by opposing end them"

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Originally posted by anthranilate
To be or not to be... Now, what is the question?
King. Read the book

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Originally posted by pawnhandler
The answer is "Alas, Poor Yorick!"
I knew him well

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Originally posted by uzless
I knew him well
mis-quote. It should be "I knew him, Horatio, a fellow of infinite jest...............etc.