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Philology 1 - Short Summary

The document provides an overview of several topics related to Chaucer's Canterbury Tales including summaries of specific tales, medieval social classes and estates, elements of the human body and humors, sins, arts, dialects of Middle English, and glossary of Middle English terms.

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Peter Hofstee
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
284 views2 pages

Philology 1 - Short Summary

The document provides an overview of several topics related to Chaucer's Canterbury Tales including summaries of specific tales, medieval social classes and estates, elements of the human body and humors, sins, arts, dialects of Middle English, and glossary of Middle English terms.

Uploaded by

Peter Hofstee
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© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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PHILOLOGY 1 SHORT SUMMARY Peter Hofstee 1. The Franklins Tale: Courtly love.

e. Arviragus (goes away); married to Dorigen; Aurelius (seduces Dorigen). 2. The Wife of Baths Tale: Romance. Knight (rapist, quest); the old hag (marries knight for answer). Sovereignty over their husbands. 3. The Millers Tale: Fabliau and parody of courtly love and biblical images. Student Nicholas; John the carpenter, married to Alison; and Absolon. 4. The Pardoners Tale: Exemplum. Three rioters, wanting to kill Death; old man; heap of gold; one gets stabbed; other 2 poisoned. 5. The Nuns Priests Tale: Beast Fable. Cock Chaunticleer and hen Pertelote; Chaunticleer caught by fox, tricks fox and is ee again. 6. The Reeves Tale: Fabliau. Miller Symkyn, students Aleyn and John, Symkyns daughter Molly and Symkyns wife. Clergy: - Regular: Monks, iars: enclosed orders, monastic vows. - Secular: Pop, bishop, parish priests. > Minor orders: not committed to celibacy. > Major orders: living under celibacy (priests, deacons). Estates Satire: medieval literary genre which gives an analysis of the vices and follies of certain social functions or professions, not of individuals. Mans three souls: Head: rational soul: reason. Heart: sensible soul: feeling. Belly: vegetable soul: passion. Contraries: Dry Hot Cold Moist Elements: Fire Earth Air Water Humours: Yellow bile Black bile Blood Phlegm Complexions: Choleric complexion Melancholic complexion Sanguine complexion Phlegmatic complexion

The Great Chain of Being: God Angels Men Animals Plants Inanimate objects. Medieval methods of instruction: 1. Exemplum: A concrete example, illustrating an abstract point made before. 2. Scholasticism: Based on logic, using rules to veri a conclusion. a. Scholastic approach: arguing for and against. b. Analysis by division and subdivision (material, formal, ecient and nal cause). 3. (Fourfold) Exegesis: Explanation, telling what it means (literal, allegorical, topological/moral, anagogical). 4. Allegory: Treats facts/events as metaphors, representing truth or other events: it signies something else. It needs to be translated; it relies on shared doctrine. The allegorical gure exists on two levels of meaning: literal (what the gure does in the narrative) and symbolic (what the gure stands for outside the narrative). The Seven Deadly Sins: pride, wrath (anger), envy, avarice (greed), lechery (lust), gluttony and sloth (laziness). The Seven Liberal Arts: - Trivium: grammar, logic and rhetoric. - Quadrivium: math, geometry, music and astronomy.
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ME dialects: Northern, Southern, East-Midland, West-Midland, Kentish. Rise of Standard English: London was the best place, South-East Midland the best candidate. Inuence of Chancery English and Caxton, who introduced the printing press in England. Close and open vowels: long : long : close if PDE pronunciation is like good, foot, or other. open if PDE pron. is with a diphthong, or sometimes spelled with <oa>. close if PDE spelling is with <e> or <ee>. open if PDE spelling is with <ea>.

Adjectives: Weak (-e): Preceded by def. art., demonstr., poss. pron., proper noun in gen., adj. in vocative. Strong: Preceded by indef. art., and all other instances. Weak verbs: preterite is formed by adding <-d>. Strong verbs: preterite os formed by changing the stem vowel.
Jakke fool = you idiot al be that = although amenden = correct anon = at once avauntour = boaster benedict = bless us (you) benece = ecclesiastical living benygne = gracious bigyle = deceive boles = bulls but, but if = unless but if = unless can, kan = know (how to), be able catel = property clad = covered [past. part.] clepe = to call cursen = excommunicate deerne = secretive defame = infamy desolaat = wretched epsie = seize everemo = constantly faren = behave ferne halwes = distant shrines forswerynges = perjuries for which = because for youre curteisye = if you please ful = very gan preye = prayed han = have hem loste/liste = they wanted holwe = emaciated hym happede = it happened to him (th)ilke = (the) same inspire = breathe it shal been = it must be koude = knew (how to), might lemman = sweetheart leyser = opportunity looth = reluctant maugre = in spite of moornynge = yearning myghte = could nam = am not [negated] namely = especially, specically nas = was not [negated] nat fully = not even nere = were not [negated] niste = did not know [negated] nolde = would not [negated] nones, nonys = occasion noot = know not [negated] nyce = foolish nygard = miser nys = is not [negated] nyste = knew not [negated] oe sithes = many times paraventure = perhaps, possibly pardee = certainly, by God quyk = vivid raughte = reached rede = advise, interpret, read replecciouns = overeating right (wel) = very (well) right = just, quite save = except for secree = discreet sholde = have to [obligation] shul = must sith = since, then so as wys! = certainly/truly somdel = somewhat 2

[ gan + inf. indicates past tense! ]

sondry = various soote = agrant sownynge in = consonant to stal him hoom = stole home straunge = foreign strondes = shores substaunce = income sweven(ys) = dream swich = such, of which task (taketh) = take ther, ther as = where therto = also, in addition thoughte (imp.) = it seemed though that = even though thynketh (imp.) = it seems to and o = back and forth to dreden = to be aaid to scoleye = to attend the schools of the university undertake = arm verray = true walweth = turns war = aware a ware yow = beware, take heed werk = deeds wherwith = wherewithal whylom = once, formerly wolde = wanted to wryen = turn yaf = gave ycleped = named ydo = done yet = however, nevertheless ygo = gone [past. part.] yholden = considered ystiked = stabbed

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