'Chanteclaire' is a French name which means 'Clear singer'. It was a very common name for Cockerels (because cockerels crow just before dawn) all through the middle ages.
It can be spelled in a dozen different ways - you have one of them.
The details of Chaucer in his description of the nun include modest, quiet, charitable, and compassionate. To make gentle fun of her, Chaucer described the nun as the prioress of her convent, aspires to have exquisite taste, and with dainty table manners.
In "The Nun's Priest's Tale," two debates about controversial issues of Chaucer's day include the debate between Chauntecleer and Pertelote about dreams and whether they hold any significance, as well as the debate about the role of women in marriage and their ability to provide sound advice, represented by Pertelote's argument against the validity of Chauntecleer's fear of his dreams.
Pertelote is a hen in "The Nun's Priest's Tale" from Chaucer's Canterbury Tales. She is the wife of Chauntecleer, the proud rooster, and tries to comfort and advise him when he has a prophetic dream about his impending doom.
One example would be the fact that the two remaining rioters drink the poisoned cups in celebration, while the audience is aware that they are poisoned. Another example could be (it might be a stretch) that when they find the gold, they forget about the old man telling them that they will find death. They don't realize that they will meet their death through the acquisition of this money and that death is not a figure, but lies within their greed.
Barbara Allen is not the main character in The Canterbury Tales, the main character is Chanticleer. The Canterbury Tales, a collection of stories, was written by Geoffrey Chaucer.
A Male nun is more commonly known as a non existent thing. So they don't existRoman Catholic AnswerPerhaps you are thinking of a monk. Sisters are the most visible representatives of the religious life, often portrayed in film and such. Brothers are not nearly as famous, as their life is not as common in the everyday culture and entertainment. from Modern Catholic Dictionary by John A. Hardon, S.J. Doubleday & Co., Inc. Garden City, NY 1980Monk.Originally a hermit or anchorite, but already in the early Church applied to men living a community life in a monastery, under vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience, according to a specific rule, such as that of St. Basil or St. Benedict. (Etym. Greek monachos, living alone, solitary.)