English

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Etymology

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From Udolpho +‎ -an.

Adjective

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Udolphan (comparative more Udolphan, superlative most Udolphan)

  1. (rare) Of or relating to The Mysteries of Udolpho (1794), a Gothic novel by Ann Radcliffe.
    • 1991, English Studies in Canada, page 96:
      After her Udolphan experience Emily says, "I am lately come from a place of wonders; but unluckily, since I left it, I have heard almost all of them explained" (491).
    • 2009, Gerry Turcotte, Peripheral Fear: Transformations of the Gothic in Canadian and Australian Fiction:
      Like the typical Udolphan landscape wherein morals are tried and in which natural laws seem to collapse, the retreat proves to be the place where Louise is tested most severely []