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Middle English

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... Forms of the Dead. Dead and Gone: Clepe. This worthy lymytour ... The Living Dead?: eke. And eek his face, as it hadde been enoyte. ( 1370's) gone by (1850's) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Middle English


1
Middle English Chaucer Style
  • by Dan Foley

2
The Canterbury Tales
  • Chaucers Masterpiece Never Finished
  • 31 Pilgrims 4 Stories Each Chaucer Old
  • Source of this Slideshow
  • Certain words strong as ever
  • Others have had vastly different changes in
    meaning
  • Others have faded out forever without explanation
  • Use of OED and ME along with Geoffrey

3
The Survivors
4
Survival Gay
  • Upon his arm he baar a gay bracer
  • Anglo-Norman, Old French
  • Beginning as Nobel, beautiful, excellent (epithet
    of praise for a woman) (1325) Also bright in
    color, showy (1375)
  • Of persons, light hearted, carefree, merry (1380)
  • Then taking on an ironic meaning for excellent,
    beautiful, fine (1581)
  • This is the big Change
  • For both persons and others meaning lewd
    dedicated to social pleasures, dissolute,
    promiscuous, hedonistic, frivolous, flamboyant,
    uninhibited (1597) or of a prostitute
  • Taken on the modern, homosexual in (1922)

5
Survival Wood
  • What sholde he studie, and make hymselven wood,
    (1374)
  • What does this mean?
  • Not only related to trees
  • N. Crazy Mad Insane
  • V. To go Mad
  • Comes from Scandinavian compound - Brain-Wood
    (Frenzied of the Brain)
  • Gone by 1600s
  • 1985 first instance of get wood

6
Survival War (Aware)
  • Ful fetys was hir cloke, as I was war
  • Originally had several meanings
  • N. to fight, to battle etc. (we all know)
  • Also meant Aware in this case (1370s)
  • OED not sure about war origin, no use of it in
    old Germanic
  • Possibly coming from ware meaning watchful
    (893) However now is obsolete
  • Adj. worse in all senses (Scottish)
  • Connection?

7
Survival Purtreye (Portray)
  • Juste, and eek daunce, and weel purtreye and
    write.
  • An easy one
  • French, Anglo Saxon Roots
  • To paint, or adorn (1330)
  • Later taking on the Modern Instance of to show,
    to depict

8
The Forms of the Dead
9
Dead and Gone Clepe
  • This worthy lymytour was cleped Huberd (1386).
  • Coming from Clip (to clink or ring) and Clap (a
    hard noise - Norse)
  • A call or cry, appeal after, proclaim
  • Last use end of the 1500s
  • Perhaps no more use for it?
  • Several other words take its place

10
The Living Dead? eke
  • And eek his face, as it hadde been enoyte.
    (1370s) gone by (1850s)
  • Forms Eke, eek, ek, eake, ec
  • Possible Aryan roots, but unknown
  • Used in terms of connecting nouns and pronouns,
    introducing sentences, modifying the predicate
  • Adv. Also, in addition
  • V. To increase, lengthen
  • N. An addition, increase
  • Today V. to supplement with great effort?
  • As in The Sox eked out the win against the
    Yankees
  • Also a male salmon (1887) No idea

11
Real Dead Ba
  • How mekly lokith Wilkyn our scheep! Com ner, my
    spouse, let me ba thy cheke (1386)
  • It means to kiss
  • Coming from English?
  • Most likely a nursery or onomatopoeia word
  • Like opening the mouth, grape (kissed like your
    grandma does)
  • Last known use in 1529
  • Reasons Unknown

12
So Ridiculously Dead Geldyng
  • I trowe he were a geldyng or a mare (1370)
  • Only instance found
  • Referring to the Pardoner
  • Meaning eunuch, or a castrated
  • Chaucer (referring to) Translates to I think
    he was a eunuch or a homosexual
  • One of the strangest phrases in literature

13
The End
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