Page:Notes and Queries - Series 9 - General Index.djvu/33

 NINTH SERIES.

Churl: "To churl," vi. 167. Cock-certainties, xi. 30. Combination, arithmetical term, vii. 17. ' Comin' thro' the Rye,' ii. 197, 434. Compound words, ix. 146. Concert : dance, x. 166. Coost, its meaning, vii. 445. Cowper centenary, v. 417. Cradle chimney, x. 296. Craigcrook, xi. 146. ' Critic,' prologue and epilogue to, vi. 394. Curious word coinages, ix. 494. Dag daw, its meaning, i. 276. Developement, ii. 427. Dewy-feathered, ii. 116. Dickens reference, xii. 494. Dis- raeli's letters, vii. 166. Divet, x. 395. Douglas (Sir James), vii. 194. Downie's slaughter, x. 115. Dunter, its meaning, i. 34. Eclecticism, bold, ii. 382. Ecstasy misspelt, vi. 65. Elucubration, x. 25. English hexameters and elegiacs, vii. 321. Exoner, viii. 525. ' Faithful Shepherdess,' iv. 268. Family likeness, viii. 335. " Famous Scots," ix. 161. "Feeding storm," viii. 13. Fergusson (Robert), i. 186. Flittings, ix. 356. Flower game, viii. 466. Folks, xi. 369. Friday superstition, vi. 265. "Gillyvine pen," iv. 73. Glasgow house, old, x. 105. Goethe, passage in, vi. 510. Golf, ix. 431. Gow, its meaning, iii. 455. Grange, Lady, iv. 57. Grant (Mrs.) of Laggan, vii. 265. Gray (Thomas), his 'Elegy,' iii. 375. Green, verb, its meaning, iii. 470. Gutter-snipe, its meaning, vii. 77. Gymnastics, its pronunciation, vi. 306. Haives=hoofs, iv. 405. " Head and harigald money," iv. 446. "Heels o'er gowdie," iii. 453. Helpmate and helpmeet, ii. 105, 310, 496. Heudin, iv. 528. Hoodock, its etymology, v. 35. Hoon aff=to hold off, v. 56. " Hop the twig," ix. 315. Hopeful : sanguine, x. 292. Horses with four white stockings toll-free, vii. 193. Howk=to dig, iv. 308. Hurgin, its etymology, v. 213. Hurtling, its origin, vi. 370. " Interlunar cave," iii. 57. Inverury and Inverurie, ii. 84. Johnson (Dr.), vii. 237. Jonson (Ben), his works, iv. 113 ; and Tennyson, xii. 186. Journalistic errors, vii. 230. Juggins, its meaning, vii. 392. Keats's classical training, i. 45. Krakatoa, volcanic eruption at, vi. 318, 376. Kilmany, xi. 25, 72. Landor on singing birds, x. 62. Larks in August, i. 65. Lata, its etymology, vi. 12. Loon, iv. 346. ' Lucy's Flitting,' iii. 317 ; iv. 154. Macaulay's flashes of silence, x. 465. Magerful, its meaning, vi. 278. Mahoun, its meaning, vi. 505. Mallet or mullet, x. 374. Margery, vii. 38. Middlin', its meaning, v. 218. Milton 'John), reading in, i. 464. ' Morn- ing of Christ's Nativity,' xi. 194. Morn, its mean- ings, iv. 265. Morning " betuix midday and nicht," ii. 193. ' Mystification?,' its author, x. 485. Nairne (Lady), her Jacobite songs, ix. 401. Nature poetry, i. 382. Neck-handkerchief, ii. 169. Newspaper, first halfpenny, v. 153. "O saw ye my father," ix. 233. Oraculous, x. 304. Palgrave (F. T.) as Professor of Poetry, iii. 446. Palmer, the verb, vii. 52. Parnell (T.), his ' Hymn to Content- ment,' iv. 456; date of his death, 495. Parting of the ways, xii. 415. Partitive, construction with, i. 38. Parvanimity, xi. 186. Pattle, ix. 256. Paulie, its meaning, vii. 257. Pawky = cunning, crafty, vi. 498. Penkill Castle, xii. 405. Pens : nibs and nebs, vii. 516. Poem on the bride oi George III., xi. 444. Poem wanted, viii. 391

Popple, its meaning, x. 294. Putrem, ' ^neid t viii. 596, v. 383. Pre-mortem, i. 289. Progress ing, its pronunciation, ii. 208. Providing = pro-" vided, viii. 309. Quotations in text-books, vi. 24, 233. Ramsay (Allan) and Thomson, x. 245. Rather, ix. 7. Rat- rime, its meaning, iii. 394. Hinges, its meaning, iii. 449. Rollick, its use as a substantive, v. 415 ; xi. 47, 432. Roscommon and Pope, xii. 126. Rusticness, vii. 5. Rymmyll, its meaning, vii. 519. tSt. Andrews and Balcarres, xii. 346. St. James's shell, vi. 316. St. Kilda, viii. 487. "Sair saunt for the Crune," iii. 33. "Save the face of," vi. 398. Sawney, its meaning, vii. 447. Scot ( Robert), xi. 452. Scotch, comic, x. 46. Scotch words and English commentators, xi. 1. Scott (Sir W.), "choriasmus" in, i. 225, 390 ; and the ' Noctes Ambrosianse,' iv. 31 ; his Scottish dialect, 421 ; stanza from his poems, v. 51 ; a con- temporary on, vi. 301, 396 ; " Another for Hector," 372 ; on conscience, viii. 420 ; and Sir David Wilkie, x. 315. "Scottish Anacreon," viii. 282. Scottish literary Churchmen, x. 6. Scottish song, viii. 102. Sedan chairs in Scotland, ii. 165. Self- ends, xi. 285. Sence : sense, x. 184. Shake- speare's geography, xi. 416 ; xii. 90. Ships of war on land, vii. 431. "Sibyl or Sybil," 317, 455. Slim, use of the word, v. 146. Smous, its meaning, vi. 409. Snutf, vii. 24. Somerville (William), xi. 325. Songstresses of Scotland, ix. 465. " Sound, sound the clarion," vi. 447. Sous, Anglicized word, v. 437 ; vi. 14. Southey, on Cowper, vi. 88 ; reference in, 104 ; and Joseph Mitchell, xi. 405. Sowens, as an article of food, v. 413 Spectacles fifty years ago, i. 449. "Squire Gawkie," xii. 205. Steading, its meaning, iii. 226 ; iv. 118, 275. Stickit or stickin minister, iii. 337. Stook, its meaning, iii. 206. Striking the anvil, vii. 72. Sugh, xii. 223. Swal- low, its song, ii. 143. Syntax of a preface, ii. 105, 331. Tamers, x. 406. Tennyson (Lord), his ' Ancient Sage,' iii. 376. Terin, ix. 448. " The first rate," vi. 47. "The mains more," vi. 315. "Thirty days hath September," x. 279. "This will never do," vi. 103. 'Three Wise Men of Gotham,' v. 465. Tib's Eve, ix. 335. "Time immemorial," i. 246. Transcendant, x. 428. Tra- vesty, unwarrantable, i. 325. Tweed and Till, iii. 324. Utilitarian, origin of, vii. 425; ix. 197 5 x. 152. Vanishing London, vi. 472. Verdue, its meaning, vii. 184. Wabbling, its derivation, vii. 272. Warburton (John), his servant, iii. 97. Watts-Dunton (T.), his ' Aylwin,' iii. 124. Welking, its meaning, ii. 517. Wilkie (W.), his ' Epigoniad,' ii. 121, 350. Wordsworth (W.), and Burns, i. 278 ; allusion to, vii. 338 ; viii. 47 ; Prof. Raleigh on, xi. 486. Words worthiana, vii. 206. Wound for winded, v. 95, 277. Yarrow unvisited, ix. 386 ; x. 18. Young and Wordsworth, vi. 426

Bayne (Thomas), his literary portraits, ix. 366

Bayonne in 1213, xi. 129

Bayswater, its etymology, i. 13, 55, 154, 293 ; ii. 18

Baxter (W. E.) on Milton, xi. 193

" Be the day weary," &c., authorship of, v. 249, 407

Beacon on alias in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, xii. 190

Beacons, ancient, viii. 305, 374