Page:Notes and Queries - Series 10 - Volume 11.djvu/200

NOTES AND QUERIES. [io s. XL FEB. 27, urn.

To every owner of

FARMER AND HENLEY'S

SLANG AND ITS ANALOGUES

FEINTED FOR PRIVATE CIRCULATION ONLY. 7 vols, 4to, boards.

IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT.

fTlHE publication has just been effected, after many delays, of the REVISED -^~ VOL. I. of this important work.

It will be remembered that Yol. I. as originally issued was planned on a much smaller scale, as regards scope and contents, than Vols. II. VII., and that the authors undertook to incorporate in a new edition of this volume the mass of new material which had come to hand since its first issue, and to extend its scope to that of the later volumes.

Part I. of the new Vol. I. was published in 1904, and the two remaining Parts of the volume are NOW READY, completing the volume, which will be supplied complete to wners of the work at the net price of 30s.

No further issues of any portion of the work are in contemplation, and this great undertaking, on which nearly thirty years of arduous labour and research have been expended, is NOW FINALLY COMPLETE.

Owners of the original issue of Vol. I. are requested to apply AT ONCE for this revision of it, as the Edition is limited, and the Publishers are unable to guarantee to supply the new volume unless applied for immediately.

A very few sets of the complete work (Vol. I. in the Revised [1909] Edition) are still available at the price o 7 7s. net.

DR. J. A. H. MURRAY (Editor of 'The English Historical Dictionary'). "It is the completes! and most scholarly work in its own field."

DR. F. J. FURNIVALL. " Every page has something of interest in it .... I was so interested in your last part, to hand yesterday, that it kept me up till two o'clock this morning dipping into his pages."

Pall Mall Gazette. "It is a great and valuable com- pilation. We have not a doubt that this will be regarded M the only slang dictionary, for words at any rate which were current before its publication is finished. One cannot imagine such a work being carried through at greater pains, We know most slang dictionaries ; we know not one so well set out, not one so concise, so free from experimental and baseless excursions into philology as this. Certainly a book to buy and to keep."

Glasgow Herald. A monumental work which justifies the most unqualified praise. The labour involved must indeed have been immense, and is only equalled by the intellectual courage to which [it] testifies. As regards thoroughness of treatment and variety of illustration, there is no falling off from the high standard of preceding parts."

Notes and Queries. "That a comprehensive dictionary of slang is requisite has been long conceded. This Mr. Farmer is supplying on a scale that has not previously, we believe, been attempted in any language, and that speaks as loudly for his industry as for his energy and his philo- logical acquirements. The work constitutes the first serious effort to grapple with a great subject. We have personally witnessed the delight with which the appear- ance of the work has been greeted. [There isj abundant testimony to its utility and the recognition awarded to it in the most influential circles Once more we profess our high admiration for the wide range of reading which the illustrations indicate. Its value as a supplement to established dictionaries is real and high."

Scotsman. "The most comprehensive, the most precise in definition, and the richest in quotation in a word, the best of existing English works on slang. A remarkable contribution to the literature of English philology."

Athenaeum. "The dictionary represents long labour. The compilers deserve hearty congratulations for the amount of steady research which their list of quotation* (wonderfully comprehensive, in view of the fact that most of the work is pioneer work) implies."

GEORGE ROUTLEDGE & SONS, LIMITED, 68-74, Carter Lane, London, E.G.