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Journal

1983

Gawain

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Full-Text Articles in Renaissance Studies

Lufly And Its Variants In Sir Gawain And The Green Knight, Jacqueline De Weever Jan 1983

Lufly And Its Variants In Sir Gawain And The Green Knight, Jacqueline De Weever

Quidditas

When Gawain enters the great hall of Bercilak's castle, he is welcomed and made to feel at home with a fine meal and fresh garments, and the lords and ladies, learning that he is Sir Gawain of King Arthur's court, say to one another:

'In menyng of manerez mere

þis burne now schal vus bryng,

I hope þaat may hym here

Schal lerne of luf-talking.' (924-927)

"Luf-talking" is Gawain's most famous attribute, and the adjectives and adverbs lufly, luflych, luflyly appear with the second highest frequency among adjectives and adverbs in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, …