The Complete Works of Geoffrey Chaucer: Introduction, glossary, and indexesClarendon Press, 1894 |
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Page vii
... Gower . § 47. Feet , accusative , and fete , dative ; entente ; fore ; broughte riming with nought . § 48. Further attacks upon rimes in Chaucer and Gower . § 49. General failure of these attacks . § 50. Assonances . § 51. Non - riming ...
... Gower . § 47. Feet , accusative , and fete , dative ; entente ; fore ; broughte riming with nought . § 48. Further attacks upon rimes in Chaucer and Gower . § 49. General failure of these attacks . § 50. Assonances . § 51. Non - riming ...
Page xxv
... Gower , who was of a Kentish family . § 18. PRONUNCIATION . The M. E. pronunciation was widely different from the present , especially in the case of the vowel - sounds . The sounds of the vowels were nearly as in French and Italian ...
... Gower , who was of a Kentish family . § 18. PRONUNCIATION . The M. E. pronunciation was widely different from the present , especially in the case of the vowel - sounds . The sounds of the vowels were nearly as in French and Italian ...
Page l
... Gower , iii . 112 , 141 , 227 , 234 ) . ' But Gower has no such forms ; he has coróne , persóne in every instance , emphasised by the use of coróned , enviróned ( iii . 112 ) , and by such lines as , ' If it in his persón - e be ' ; ii ...
... Gower , iii . 112 , 141 , 227 , 234 ) . ' But Gower has no such forms ; he has coróne , persóne in every instance , emphasised by the use of coróned , enviróned ( iii . 112 ) , and by such lines as , ' If it in his persón - e be ' ; ii ...
Page li
... Gower may not have meant to use the form leisir , since that is the true A. F. form cor- responding to O. F. loisir ( still in use ) . Lastly , Gower rimes dore ( durǝ ) , a door , with dore ( durǝ ) , the 1st p . pr . subj . of the ...
... Gower may not have meant to use the form leisir , since that is the true A. F. form cor- responding to O. F. loisir ( still in use ) . Lastly , Gower rimes dore ( durǝ ) , a door , with dore ( durǝ ) , the 1st p . pr . subj . of the ...
Page liii
... Gower , C. A. ii . 239. But Gower's phrase is ' that thou art comen fore ' ; and I suspect that he knew the language of his own time . The fore may answer to the A. S. fore , on account of ( Grein , i . 320 ) ; or , more probably , that ...
... Gower , C. A. ii . 239. But Gower's phrase is ' that thou art comen fore ' ; and I suspect that he knew the language of his own time . The fore may answer to the A. S. fore , on account of ( Grein , i . 320 ) ; or , more probably , that ...
Autres éditions - Tout afficher
The Complete Works of Geoffrey Chaucer: Introduction, glossary, and indexes Geoffrey Chaucer Affichage du livre entier - 1894 |
The Complete Works of Geoffrey Chaucer: Introduction, glossary, and indexes Geoffrey Chaucer Affichage du livre entier - 1926 |
The Complete Works of Geoffrey Chaucer: Introduction, glossary, and indexes Geoffrey Chaucer Affichage du livre entier - 1894 |
Expressions et termes fréquents
accent amphibrach Astrolabe Balade Boethius Book Booksellers Brink caesura Cambridge Canterbury Canterbury Tales Chaucer COLLEGE LIBRARY comma comp Complaint conj copies Cotgrave dative Delete denoted dere dissyllabic Edinburgh edition elided Envoy Eton College examples Feyne final French origin Glasgow Glossary Godefroy Goon Goth Gower grene hence honour House of Fame Icel infin JOHN Kentish Legend leve Liverpool London Manchester metre Midland Minor Poems monosyllabic mutation Nedes occurs Oghte open long Oxford Peyne phrase plural prep pres preterite Prof pronunciation PUBLIC LIBRARY refl remarkable rimes Romaunt Rose scribes shew short sound stanza strong verbs subj suffix symbol Tale thou Troilus usually verse vowel weak syllable weak verbs whilst wolde words written