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sotie
[soh-tee]
noun
a satirical and topical comedy employing actors dressed in traditional fool's costume, popular in France during the late Middle Ages, and often used as a curtain raiser to mystery and morality plays.
Word History and Origins
Example Sentences
The morality was the special property of the first, the sotie of the second.
The sotie was directly satirical, and only assumed the guise of folly as a stalking-horse for shooting wit.
Farcical interludes were interpolated in the mysteries themselves; short farces introduced and rendered palatable the moralities, while the sotie was itself but a variety of farce, and all the kinds were sometimes combined in a sort of tetralogy.
The Sotie is a class of much more idiosyncrasy.
The Sotie, at least in its purely political form, was, as might be expected, not very long lived.
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