This volume presents fifteenth-century teaching and reference materials
designed to support facility in French among the English. At its centre
is the Liber donati, a collection of notes on French grammar and lexis
that concludes on a lively series of dialogues showing French in action;
also included is Commune parlance. These materials paint a vivid picture
of the kinds of French that English learners might desire to wield and
of the high levels of fluency they could achieve. As such, this edition
makes an important contribution to the history of modern languages
education and to recent reassessments of the longevity of French in
medieval England. Its pairing of first-time modern-English translations
with facing-page original text allows teachers and students of the
Middle Ages and all interested in the history of language teaching to
use these stimulating materials in many ways.