For comfort wherof this other nonne went to the same confessour and shroue her lykewyse, that she had synned in lechery.
And incontynent the olde nonne mette with her, askynge her howe she lyked her confessour; whiche sayd he was the best gostly father that euer she hadde and the most easyest in penaunce-geuyng.
Nonne found an emotional state of depression with hypochondriacal fear, disturbance of sleep, deficient appetite, constipation and pollakisuria.
Re the controversy over Oppenheim’s traumatic neurosis, Nonne holds with the Charcot school that traumatic neurosis is clinically identical with hysteria.
Case 531, though an officer, responded to hypnosis well, and Nonne remarks that hypnotizability is independent of the presence of any neuropathic tendencies, or of any loss of resistance through exhaustion.
Re taint, Nonne found such tendencies absent in more than half of his cases with careful anamneses.
Re recurrences after hypnotism, see remarks of Nonne under Case 530.
Re hypnosis in Germany, it should be noted that Nonne is the chief protagonist for hypnosis, at least among the well-known neurologists.
Nonne is the great exponent of the use of hypnotism in treatment of the war hysterias.
Nonne states that the data of the war prove that hysteria is neither a degenerative disease according to classical theory, nor a disease based upon Freudian principles.
Re traumatic neurosis, Nonne dislikes this term of Oppenheim, because such a term rather tends to connote unfavorable prognosis.
Nonne in fact maintains that the hysterical syndrome may occasionally occur with much greater ease in a normal person than ever has been known before.
Re Charcot, Nonneremarks that the work of Charcot on hysteria is not sufficiently well-known, especially as civilian practitioners in peace times had few cases.
Re astasia-abasia, Nonne found these cases heading a group of 63 cases of war hysteria treated in a twelvemonth.
As quoted under Case 530, Nonne holds that the war data show that hysteria is neither a form of degeneration nor an affair built on the Freudian schema.
Here is a case in which, as Nonne states, the somatic trauma required by Oppenheim as the basis of every traumatic neurosis did not occur.
It is precisely in these cases of normals getting hysterical that Nonne gets especially good results with hypnosis.
Pryour and Convent have forfeted the seid hole manor to the heyers undre her Convent seele of record, because of myne nonne payment of xxv.
For there is nonne in your cuntre that we myght wryght to for trust so well as unto you; for, as we be enformyd, ye be owr well wyller, and so we pray you of goud contynuaunce.
The Nonne Preestes Tale is based on Marie de France's fable of the Cock and the Fox, though it is possible that Chaucer's more immediate source was an enlargement of this, called the Roman de Renart.
Three typical instances may be taken as illustrating his method: the Man of Lawes Tale, the Nonne Preestes Tale, and the story of Count Hugo of Pisa in the Monkes Tale.
The Nonne Preestes Tale illustrates, not only Chaucer's comic use of simile, but, what is closely allied to this, the comic effect produced by speaking of one thing in terms of another.
Some therefore of Ierosolymis: Nonne hic est Jerusalem said: Is not this he quem quaerunt interficere?
The Jews therefore et dixerunt ei: Nonne bene answered and said to him: Do dicimus nos quia Samaritanus not we say well that thou art es tu, et daemonium habes?
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "nonne" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.