Shakespeare in many of his works uses phonetics and word choice to connect certain aspects of his plays. Whether it be "noting" being a similar word to "nothing" in Much Ado about Nothing or whether most of the sounds of words in a soliloquy have hard sounds in them, Shakespeare had a way of making the way things that are said or written connect his stories on a deeper level. This happened with the naming of the movie 10 Things I Hate about You, based on the play The Taming of the Shrew. Just reading the last sentence you may have noticed the way the two titles compliment each other. Both titles have six syllables, but the similarities are much closer than that. The first two words of both start with a "T" and include one standard "te" sound and one "th." and the endings "You" and "Shrew" rhyme. These sounds similarities as well as using similar phonetic ordering means that you say "10 Things I Hate about You" and "The Taming of the Shrew" at exactly the same cadence. This binds to two pieces in a masterfully subtle way.