Page:Notes and Queries - Series 9 - General Index.djvu/12

 GENERAL INDEX.

its meaning, i. 490. Dings in York, iv. 270 Dower, its measurement, x. 501. Driving th commons in 1574, iv. 224. Dryhurst : Columbell ix. 366. Emery family, v. 27. English coinage its origin, iv. 431 ; v. 29, 149. Funeral cards, viii. 21. Gallows birds and others, iv. 233. Gar- land, its etymology, vi. 365. Gavel and shieling, the words, v. 210. Gavelage and pillar-tax, vii, 81, 141. Gybbins, race of the, x. 87. Hagioscope or oriel, xi. 301, 321, 375 ; xii. 494. Hexham Priory and the Augustales, ii. 241 ; iii. 8, 410 ; iv. 116. Hide, its area, i. 96. House, as a measure of arable land, v. 349 ; as a measure of communal rights, vi. 122. Ingate, its meaning, iv. 4 Inns, noblemen's, i. 327. I.O.U., vi. 74, 336. Land measures, English and Roman, vi. 303, 381, 461. Lanes, sunken, iv. 289. Marifer, its meaning, i. 333. Meresteads or mesesteads, ix. 248 ; x. 9, 134. Messuage, its derivation, v. 520. Myas, its meaning, i. 124, 414. 'N. & Q.' contributors to vol. i., v. 90. Oxford, place-name, vi. 193. Peckham Rye, i. 296. Pediment, vi. 96. Posses- sive case in proper names, i. 166. Petigrewe, its etymology, v. 117, 233. Pews annexed to houses, vii. 388. Rotten Row, i. 217, 470. St. Giles's Church, Northampton, vii. 367. Sare^dry, viii. 61. Scalinga, its meaning, i. 215. Scouring of land, i. 286. Sherewynd surname, iv. 417. Shis'n and this'n, xi. 89. Sue=follow, i. 206. Sween or swean, iii. 212. Tara Hall, its area, xi. 121. Tideswell and Tideslow, xii. 341. Todmorden, its etymology, i. 78, 417. Twilly toes, iii. 406. Wake=a village feast, xii. 473. Warth, x. 476. Went, applied to land, viii. 40.

Adelaide waistcoat, origin of the term, x. 48, 155

Adelbright, Rex Norfolciae, his biography, v. 89, 257

Adelphi Society of London, xi. 110, 337

Adjectival change, viii. 462 ; ix. 113

Adjectives, extraordinary compound, ii. 224 ; royal, ix. 206

Adkin (Mary), d. 1805, memorial in Llandaff Cathe- dral, xii. 53

Administrations, long, vi. 245, 310 ; x. 105

Admire used in the sense of marvel, viii. 83, 234

Adoxographical, use of the word, xi. 425

Adoxy, use of the word, xi. 285

Adrian on quartered arms, xi. 209

Adrop, alchemical term, iii. 386

Adulation extraordinary, viii. 473 ; ix. 30, 117

Advent Sunday, Collect for, i. 128, 298

'Adventurer, The,' reprints, i. 507

Adventurers, Merchant, v. 487

Advertise, former use of the word, xi. 406, 512

Advertisement, riming, iii. 5 ; coronation, 1685, x. 166

Advertisement competition, eighteenth century, v. 105

Advertisements, insularity in, ii. 464 ; in London, 1607, v. 454 ; and tradesmen's cards, xi. 287

Ady (J. M.) on Lorenzo da Pavia, xii. 398

JE or ce, use of, xii. 291

' jfEgio,' a seventeenth-century interlude, iii. 205

^Eneas, the real, ii. 444 ; iii. 74, 132, 414

jflEolian harp, its construction and use, x. 448, 514 : xi. 33

^regraphans= compositor, iii. 126

Aeronautics, early, ix. 84, 177

2Esop, remarks on, iii. 344, 404 ; iv. 85, 285 Affection and connexion, false forms of the words,

x. 203

Afficher, its derivation, ii. 224 Affidavit: "Truth will out, even in an affidavit,"

xi. 505

Affirmations of children, ix. 185, 273, 375 Afra on a song wanted, i. 409 Africa, accounts of exorcism in, vi. 368 Africa, equatorial, its bibliography, xi. 406, 451 Africa, South, "grave of great reputations," v. 48,

156 African names, their pronunciation and derivation,

i. 466 ; ii. 52, 96, 152, 193, 310, 357 ; iv. 436, 519 ;

v. 49, 113 ; viii. 327 Africa, South, war : form of intercession, v. 184 ;

English soldiers at battle of Colenso, v. 285 ; cor- respondents killed and wounded, v. 469 Africander : Afrikander, v. 89 Afterthink^to repent, ii. 287, 335 Agam colours, its meaning, iii. 68, 170, 296 ; vi. 215,

355

Agnes a fateful name, iii. 249, 377 Agricola on furlong, x. 428 Agriculture, technical rimes descriptive of, vi. 410,

512

Aiden thorough, ii. 208 Ailantus=tree of heaven, iv. 347, 423 Al/ia, its derivation, xii. 481 Ainger (A.) on Helen Faucit and Margaret Gillies,

v. 147. Inedited seventeenth-century poem, viii.

448. Lamb (Charles) as a journalist, viii. 85 Ainsworth (W. Harrison), his ' Jack Sheppard,' iii.

249 ; 'Old St. Paul's,' iii. 186, 271, 331, 418, 423 ;

biographical notes, iii. 423 ; editions of his works,

ix. 409 ; x. 10, 56, 97; his house at Kensal Green,

x. 186 ; and Ambrose Rookwood's ride, xi. 9 Airy (O.) on Sir Robert Moray, vi. 507. Pearson

(John), his biography, vi. 519 Aiscoughe ( Askew) =Spraclinge, xi. 467 Aitch (J.) on ' Aylwin, x. 16 Aitken (G. A.) on Arbuthnott, viii. 88 Aitken surname, xii. 129, 213, 273, 397 Aix-la-Chapelle, pronunciation of the name, ix. 467 ;

x. 33

Akerode (Edmund), his will, i. 105, 137 Akers (George and John), their biographies, vi. 149 Alabama, the, and Lord John Russell, i. 28 ; xii. 49 Alabaster, sculptors in, xi. 127, 217 Alabaster group, its subject, ii. 427 Alamains, its meaning, vi. 129, 212, 258, 307 Alaric, and the chiefs of the Urua, iii. 69, 177 ; his

burial, viii. 105 Alarmist, origin of the word, ii. 166 Alba Longa and Sir William Gell, ii. 201 Alba Pottery, viii. 44, 151 Albany, plan of the, xii. 49, 157 Albany (Robert Stewart, Duke of), his heirs, ii. 489 ;

iii. 125, 233 Albemarle, second Earl of, 1702-54, his portrait, ix.

468 Albert Gate, French Embassay at, i. 164, 294 ;

" Gibraltar and Malta," at, iv. 204, 296, 357, 502 Ibert the Good, use of the phrase, vii. 88 Albion,' the, and Charles Lamb, viii. 60, 85, 125, 166