Browse Items (16391 total)

Jimura, Akiyuki.   Bulletin of the Faculty of the School of Education (Hiroshima Unviersity) 17 (1995): 1-9.
An investigation of the relationship between negatives and negative expressions, content, and characterization in ClT.

Jimura, Akiyuki.   Bulletin of the Faculty of of the School Education (Hiroshima University) 16 (1994): 1-8.
A sociolinguistic exploration of Criseyde's grammar, literacy, pronunciation, and verbosity, considered in relation to the vocabulary and syntax of fourteenth-century upper-class women.

Jimura, Akiyuki.   English and English Teaching, Vol. 2: A Festschrift in Honour of Kiichiro Nakatani (Hiroshima: Department of English, Faculty of School Education, Hiroshima University, 1997), pp. 57-69.
In TC, descriptions of nature, including natural objects, plants, and animals, reflect the characters' emotions. When characters "act in harmony with nature," things go well; when they act against nature, they are destroyed by its "uncontrollable…

Jimura, Akiyuki.   Hiroshima University Studies, Faculty of Letters 58 (1998): 199-208.
Charts word order in various editions of CT and TC with reference to manuscripts on which they are based. Although the evidence in CT is obscure, Root's edition of TC shows a marked tendency toward modern subject-verb-object syntax. Includes an…

Jimura, Akiyuki.   Jacek Fisiak and Akio Oizumi, eds. English Historical Linguistics and Philology in Japan (Berlin and New York: Mouton de Gruyter, 1998), pp. 91-110
A revised, abridged version of three previous essays: see SAC 17 (1995), no. 257 (Parts I and II), and SAC 19 (1997), no. 306 (Part III).

Jimura, Akiyuki.   Hiroshima University Studies, Faculty of Letters 59: 112-29, 1999.
Tallies instances of variant spellings in modern editions of Chaucer's works, focusing on the loss of letters initially, medially, and finally. Data are derived from editions by Blake, Benson, and Robinson for CT, and Benson, Robinson, Windeatt, and…

Jimura, Akiyuki.   Loren C. Gruber, ed. Essays on Old, Middle, Modern English and Old Icelandic in Honor of Raymond P. Tripp, Jr. (Lewiston, N.Y.: Mellen Press, 2000), pp. 409-46.
Compares each line of TC in Larry Benson's, F. N. Robinson's, R. K. Root's, and B. A. Windeatt's editions in preparation for a larger study that will account for differences of word choice and syntax among these editions.

Jimura, Akiyuki.   Hisao Tsuru, ed. Fiction and Truth: Essays on Fourteenth-Century English Literature (Tokyo: Kirihara Shoten, 2000), pp. 177-94.
Tabulates Chaucer's collocations of adjectives with the Christian God and pagan gods in TC.

Jimura, Akiyuki.   Masahiko Kanno, Gregory K. Jember, and Yoshiyuki Nakao, eds. A Love of Words: English Philological Studies in Honour of Akira Wada (Tokyo: Eihosha, 1998), pp. 103-14.
Some examples of metathesis in CT and TC (e.g., ax/ask, thurgh/thrugh, open/opne) may result from modern editorial selection; others (e.g., lisped/lipsed in GP 1.264-65) may indicate Chaucer's creative indication of individual speech patterns.

Jimura, Akiyuki.   Hiroshima: Keisuisha, 2005.
A study of Chaucer's works from a linguistic-stylistic approach, based on Jimura's doctoral dissertation (2002).

Jimura, Akiyuki.   Mizuda Hidemi et al., eds. Death and Life in Medieval Europe (Hiroshima: Keisuisha, 2006), pp. 109-40,
Examines Chaucer's varied and metaphorical use of "herte" in BD. In Japanese.

Jimura, Akiyuki.   Hiroshima University Studies, Graduate School of Letters 64 (2004): 63-76.
Discusses Chaucer's imagination, investigating the description of nature in TC. In Japanese.

Jimura, Akiyuki.   Osamu Imahayashi, Yoshiyuki Nakao, and Michiko Ogura, eds. Aspects of the History of the English Language and Literature: Selected Papers Read at SHELL 2009, Hiroshima (New York; Peter Lang, 2010),, pp. 93-100.
Jimura cites instances of impersonal constructions in TC and KnT in which verbs of "occurrence or happening" (e.g., "befal," "hap") are used to present important events and to suggest inevitability.

Jimura, Akiyuki.   Noburo Harano, Hidemi Mizuda, Hiromichi Yamashiro, Akiyuki Jimura, and Yoshiyuki Nakao, eds. Chuusei Yoroppa no shukuen [Feasts in Medieval Europe] (Hiroshima: Keisuisha, 2010), pp. 145-73.
Study of wine and ale in CT. In Japanese

Jimura, Akiyuki.   Shizuya Tara, Mayumi Sawada, and Larry Walker, eds. Language and Beyond: Festschrift for Hiroshi Yonekura on the Occasion of His 65th Birthday (Tokyo: Eichosha, 2007), pp. 265-83.
Discusses Chaucer's proverbial wisdom in Mel. In Japanese

Jimura, Akiyuki.   Tomonori Matsushita, A. V. C. Schmidt, and David Wallace, eds. From Beowulf to Caxton: Studies in Medieval Languages and Literature, Texts and Manuscripts (Bern: Lang, 2011), pp. 215-28.
Examines Chaucer's use of the prefix "y"- in the history of the English language.

Jimura, Akiyuki.   Yoshiyuki Nakao and Yoko Iyeiri, eds. Chaucer's Language: Cognitive Perspectives (Suita: Osaka, 2013), pp. 27-45.
Illustrates how the descriptions of nature in TC reflect main characters' cognitive processes as well as the development of love.

Jimura, Akiyuki.   Yoko Iyeiri and Jennifer Smith, eds. Studies in Middle and Modern English: Historical Change (Osaka: Osaka Books, 2014), pp. 115-32.
Examines the meaning of "meat and drink" in Chaucer's texts, referring to the "OED" and biblical uses. Discusses the "process of idiomatization" of this expression by looking into its uses through Spenser, Shakespeare, Milton, and Dickens.

Jimura, Akiyuki.   Studies in Medieval English Language and Literature 33 (2018): 1–27.
Discusses how Chaucer's own familial relationships and home life are reflected in depictions of home and familial relationships in his works.

Jimura, Akiyuki.   The Society for Chaucer Studies and Koichi Kano, eds. To the Days of Studying Medieval English Literature: Essays in Memory of Professor Tadahiro Ikegami (Tokyo: Eihosha, 2021), pp. 183-203.
Analyzes examples of computer-assisted textual comparison amongst nine versions of CT.

Jirsa, Curtis Roberts-Holt.   DAI A69.02 (2008): n.p.
Focuses on "Piers Plowman" (and considers TC), using "modern lyric criticism" as an approach to medieval narratives.

Jo, Thae-Ho.   Geibun-Kenkyu (Keio University) 107 (2014): 17-36.
Argues that the idealized knightly figure of Troilus in TC is taken from the characterization of Florio in Boccaccio's "Filocolo."

Johanson, Paula.   Berkeley Heights, N.J.: Enslow, 2010.
Introductory commentary on British poetry from Anglo-Saxon poetry to the works of John Keats, focusing on canonical works and writers. Chapter 2 (pp. 21-30) summarizes Chaucer's life and describes his iambic meter, explicating Truth (original and…

John, Lilse C.   Notes and Queries 201 (1956): 97-98.
Seeks advice in understanding the phrase "Chaucer's borrow" which appears Sir Nicholas H. Nicholas's "Memoirs of the Life and Times of Sir Christopher Hatton" (1847), where it is quoted from a letter to Hatton from William Dodington. Clarifies the…

Johnson, Boris.   New York: Riverhead, 2012.
The mayor of London reviews the history of London from the Celts to the present, organizing each developmental period around an historical person. The chapter on the later Middle Ages features Chaucer's connection to London, including his dwelling in…
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