This is a part of a revised version of an earlier paper: "Word-formation of Chaucer's English" delivered in the symposium III at the Seventh Annual General Meeting of the Japan Society for Medieval English Studies: "History of English Word-formation" chaired by Professor Yoshinobu Niwa, Chubu University, held at Hiroshima Shudo University, Hiroshima on 1 December 1991. The present paper shows only the collected data concerning the word-formation of Chaucer's English, the article which the present writer read then. The data consist of the following two parts: (1) complex words and (2) compound words. The detailed analysis of the data will be presented in the further study
This dissertation analyzes Chaucer\u27s translations from the French on the verbal level. The purpos...
In my undergraduate days I was bored with language descriptions based on the then-popular structural...
The paper researches how medieval English reality of Geoffrey Chaucer’s “The Miller’s Tale” is broug...
This is a part of a revised version of an earlier paper: "Word-formation of Chaucer's English" deliv...
This is a part of a revised version of an earlier paper: "Word-formation of Chaucer's English" deliv...
In this work, an attempt will be made to give a comprehensive account of the language, and especial...
This is a part of a revised version of my paper read in the symposium at the 43rd General Meeting of...
Dor Juliette. Chaucer's French Loan-Words and the Use of French in Fourteenth-Century England. In: B...
This research mainly explores the comparison of words from Middle and Modern English periods. This r...
In this study, I would like to present the French influence on the English language and its vocabul...
There are two forms in most nouns, one for the singular and one for the plural. And they have two fo...
The language of Chaucer bears a close relationship to his versification, meter, and rhyme. Chaucer's...
The present study analyses the senses and sense-relations of approximately fifty words of two major ...
The genesis of this piece of work, which has been in progress since 1960, though the topic was in my...
International audienceThis chapter tackles the issue of Chaucer’s Middle English language. It traces...
This dissertation analyzes Chaucer\u27s translations from the French on the verbal level. The purpos...
In my undergraduate days I was bored with language descriptions based on the then-popular structural...
The paper researches how medieval English reality of Geoffrey Chaucer’s “The Miller’s Tale” is broug...
This is a part of a revised version of an earlier paper: "Word-formation of Chaucer's English" deliv...
This is a part of a revised version of an earlier paper: "Word-formation of Chaucer's English" deliv...
In this work, an attempt will be made to give a comprehensive account of the language, and especial...
This is a part of a revised version of my paper read in the symposium at the 43rd General Meeting of...
Dor Juliette. Chaucer's French Loan-Words and the Use of French in Fourteenth-Century England. In: B...
This research mainly explores the comparison of words from Middle and Modern English periods. This r...
In this study, I would like to present the French influence on the English language and its vocabul...
There are two forms in most nouns, one for the singular and one for the plural. And they have two fo...
The language of Chaucer bears a close relationship to his versification, meter, and rhyme. Chaucer's...
The present study analyses the senses and sense-relations of approximately fifty words of two major ...
The genesis of this piece of work, which has been in progress since 1960, though the topic was in my...
International audienceThis chapter tackles the issue of Chaucer’s Middle English language. It traces...
This dissertation analyzes Chaucer\u27s translations from the French on the verbal level. The purpos...
In my undergraduate days I was bored with language descriptions based on the then-popular structural...
The paper researches how medieval English reality of Geoffrey Chaucer’s “The Miller’s Tale” is broug...