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''Strange but true'' (or ''strange, but true'') is a phrase often used to refer to a tabloid newspaper column (such as the ''Weekly World News'') that features unusual ("strange") stories. The c. 1937 ''True'' magazine had a "Strange But True" section on the back cover. ==Notable uses== Perhaps the earliest use of "strange but true" in a published work is in Shakespeare's ''Macbeth'' (~1599), act III, scene IV (Ross and Old Man outside of Macbeth's castle): :Ross: "And—''strange but true''!—Duncan's horses, beautiful and swift, the best of their kind, broke down their stalls and ran wild They refused to obey, as if they were at war with mankind." * 'Tis ''strange — but true''; for truth is always strange; Stranger than fiction —''Don Juan'' by Lord Byron (Canto 14), 1819 The 1859 ''Notes and Queries'' by Martim de Albuquerque in a reprinted 1704 account by Edward F. Rimbault ("printed for R. Smith near Spittle-Fields Market") titled ''A most Strange but True Account of a very Large Sea-Monster''.〔(Google Books ), ''Notes and Queries'', Martim de Albuquerque, Oxford University Press, 1859, p. 42〕 * ''It is ''strange, but true'' as strange, that imitation generally interests us more than reality.'' —Richard Grant White, ''Life and Genius of Shakespeare'', 1865 A "Strange But True" column, authored by brothers Bill Sones and Rich Sones, is currently distributed to U.S. newspapers.() 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Strange but true」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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