Page:Notes and Queries - Series 10 - General Index.djvu/230

 222

GENERAL INDEX.

Pucci (Francesco), d. 1512, his epitaph, ix. 324 Puckeridge and pickeridge, their connexion, iv.

367, 495

Puckery-hickery, meaning of the term, iv. 87, 232 Pudding, building term, xi. 328, 498 ; xii. 77 Pudding made by North American Indians, iv.

288

Pudworm=piddock, xi. 50 Pugging tooth, its meaning, vi. 342, 391, 434,

517

Puggle, Essex dialect word, iv. 486 Pugh (A. M.) on people to be avoided or culti- vated, vii. 175 Pugh's mourning warehouse in Regent Street,

xi. 428 Pulci's ' II Morgante Maggiore ' and Uncle Remus,

ii. 183, 276

Pulford (F. G.) on Pightle : pikle, v. 376 Pull one's leg, U.S. slang term, vii. 164 Pulle or maste in Caxton's ' Fables of ^Esop,' viii.

206 Pulpit, clergyman with battledore in, viii. 450 ;

ix. 53 Pulpit at St. Peter's Church, Wolverhampton,

i. 407, 476 ; ii. 37, 96 Pulpits, English, books on, viii. 469 Pulpits, old, their removal, viii. 467 Pulpits, open-air, iv. 430 ; v. 55, 96, 154, 498 Pulque = wine made of aloe, its etymology, vi.

145

Pulteney (Sir John), his Cold Harbour, ii. 341 ' Punch,' and John Leech, iv. 107 ; and Lord

Brougham, vii. 246 ; on Oldridge's Balm of

Columbia, 289 ; its Exhibition, x. 327 Punch, the beverage, origin of the word, iv. 401,

477, 531 ; v. 37, 71 ; vi. 72 ; viii. 520 ; xi. 167 ;

and garum, a source, xi. 466 Punch and Judy, their collocation, xi. 371, 497 Punch -bowl in Warwick Castle, vi. 27 Punchbowl of Lowestoft ware, arms on, viii. 488 ;

ix. 33 Punctuation : meaning of poetry altered by, ii.

183 ; in MSS. and printed books, ii. 301, 462 ;

iv. 144, 262 ; v. 502 ; viii. 222 ; in reprints,

viii. 346, 457 Punishment, capital, in eighteenth century, x.

289, 392 Punishment, military, bastinado in, x. 246, 355,

397

Punishment for high treasor, x. 229, 314, 354 Punishments, legal, in England, xi. 221, 404 Puns at the Haymarket Theatre, i. 269 Punt in football,* xi. 187, 257, 315, 355 Punteus or Penteus (J.), c. 1649, famous physician,

iv. 189 ; v. 212 Purcell (Henry), music for ' Macbeth,' ii. 142 ; for

' Tempest,' 165, 270, 329, 370 ; ode on his

death, 261 Purchas (V. R. P.) on Shakespeare's portrait, iv.

494

Purdonium, name for coalscuttle, iii. 388, 436 Purey-Cust (Dean A. P.) on York Minster, vi. 507 Purfly, use of the word by Carlyle, xi. 248, 292 Purim token, 1796 : Cabbage Society, viii. 368,

413

Puritans' Christmas under Charles I., ii. 505 * Purleigh and the Washington ancestry, x. 323 Purlieu, use and meaning of the word, i. 85 Purnell (E. K.) on Buckingham Hall or College, i.

108 ; Stewart (General Charles), 127 Purnell family, vi. 130

Purple, colour intended by, i. 71, 157, 214 Purple patch, earliest use, i. 447, 477, 510

Purpose, alleged dance-name, xii. 27

Pusey (E. B.) and celebration of solitary Mass, iii,

8, 95

Put-log, building term, xi. 328, 498 ; xii. 77 Putt, use of the word, ii. 426, 533 Puttenham (G.), his ' Proportion Poetical,' i. 465 ;.

on merismus, ii. 464 Puttick & Simpson, auctioneers, the firm, viii.

363 Puttick & Simpson on Viner memorial brass, xii..

207

Puzzle, typographical, x. 186, 216 Puzzle pictures, iv. 247

Pych=pitch, applied to weaver's reed, x. 248 Pychard, name for a woodpecker, iv. 55 Pye (H. J.), Poet Laureate, read at head of troops,.

iii. 345

Pyke and Halley families, ix. 166 ; xi. 407 Pyke or Pike families of London and Greenwich,.

vi. 207 ; viii. 44 Pym (John), his mother, x. 309 Pym and Jephson families, xi. 128 Pynchbeke (Rev. J.), of Colchester, his biography *

iii. 421 Pyramus and Thisbe, death songs of, v. 341, 401

Q in the ' H.E.D.,' iii. 146

Q. on College Heraldique de France, ix. 96. De

Garencieres, vi. 309. Wheatear, xii. 329 " Q. in the Corner," pseudonym, xi. 385 " Q in the corner," use of the phrase, ix. 407 Q. (A. N.) on diadems, ii. 65. Earliest British

music publisher, viii. 369. First American

newspaper, ix. 347. Initial letters instead of

words, ix. 174. "Mr.,"iv. 67. Nonconformist

burial-grounds, ix. 233. ' Oxford Ramble,' iv.

78. Picton (General), xi. 490. Treloar (Sir W.)

and B. L. Farjeon, viii. 333

Q. (D. M. R.) on Major Roderick Mackenzie, xii. 38 Quadi and Marcomanni, Gibbon on, vii. 89 Quadrant colonnade, its sale in 1848, viii. 66 Quaintry or Quentery family, iii. 289 Quaker princes buried at Wisbech, ii. 208, 294 Quakers, wet and dry, ii. 128, 197 Quandary, its etymology and pronunciation, iii. 4,

217 Quapladde, meaning of the word, vi. 429 ; vii. 14,

256

Quaplode and Bacon families, ix. 210 Quarrell (W. H.) on Covesea Caves, Newport,

Essex, viii. 27, 368. Nine Maidens, ii. 453,

Quice, i. 195 Quarter of corn, i. 340 Quarter Sessions, their records, iii. 287, 337, 355 ;

immorality proclamation at, x. 209 Quartered, hanged, and drawn, the punishment,

i. 209, 275, 356, 371, 410, 497 ; ii. 97 Quarterstaves, origin, of the name, iii. 165, 235 ;

vi. 106, 155 Quattrocento, use and meaning of the word, viii.

189, 258 Quebec and Surveillante, action between the

frigates, ii. 228, 271 Queen, Attorney-General to, holders of the office,

x. 110, 170, 217

Queen, English, as Jezebel, xi. 341, 458 Queen Elizabeth's Day, 17 November, xii. 404 Queens, their surnames, iii. 114, 174, 351, 412 Queens and kings compared, v. 389 Queen's Theatre, 1704, its corner-stone, xii. 364 Queen's uniform, iii. 420 j