Picrochole is a fictional character created by François Rabelais, who attacks the Kingdom of Grandgousier in the novel Gargantua and Pantagruel. His gives his name to the war he fights: la guerre picrocholine.
Picrochole is a stereotypical bad king, whom Rabelais seeks to deride by putting him in apposition to the good king, represented by Grandgousier, Gargantua's father.
The expression guerre picrocholine (Picrocholine War) and the adjective picrocholin have since entered the French language, meaning an absurd conflict with futile motives.[1]
YouTube Encyclopedic
-
1/2Views:4 1411 644
-
BAC Gargantua- François Rabelais- Résumé, La guerre picrocholine (23-49), L'abbaye de Thélème
-
La Laitière et le Pot au lait - Fables - Jean de La Fontaine
Transcription
Origin
"Picrochole" comes from the Greek words πικρός (pikros) meaning "bitter" and χολή (chole) meaning "bile",[2] and signifies his dark and acerbic moods. Above all, Picrochole is man who takes on enormous projects he has no chance of completing.
See also
References
- ^ picrocholine, Larousse.fr
- ^ Brewer, E. Cobham (1895). "Picrochole". Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable. New York: Harper & Brothers.