Page:Notes and Queries - Series 9 - General Index.djvu/81

 NINTH SERIES.

73

without end," ii. 525 ; iii. 355 ; order of supplica- tions in the Litany, iii. 188, 394 ; " Al men," and " All men," Epistle for Wednesday before Easter, 287, 415, 474 ; tables for finding Easter, v. 281 ; suppressed in 1645, vi. 205, 294 ; reprint of, vii. 126, 193 ; N. orM. in, 367 ; Morning and Evening Prayer only, 409 ; Latin versions, 474 ; lines on Latin, viii. 50 ; "Wicked," 120

Commons, driving the, in 1574, iv. 224

Commons, gates on, iv. 107, 155, 251, 405

Commons House of Parliament. See House of Commons.

Commonwealth arms in churches, xii. 194, 396

Company of miners, vii. 390, 497

Compass, its points used in describing position, x 5, 94

Compass window : compass ceiling, its meaning, x. 329, 517

Complain = to groan or creak from overstraining, vii. 387

Compotus of Bolton Abbey, 1290-1325, x. 86

Compound words, ix. 146

Comte de Paris, use of the title, x. 368, 390

Conan on how to read old registers, iii. 447

Concert, etymology of the word, x. 166

Concert rooms, Hanover Square, v. 493

Concordances to poets, xiii. 329

Cond, meaning of the word, x. 126, 235, 295

Condor on Abham, Devonshire, iii. 89

Conduits, old, of London, x. 421 ; xi. 73, 112, 189

Coney Hope Lane, St. Mary's Church in, xii. 170

Confectionery, ancient, called turnures, x. 149

Confessional, use of the, xi. 349

Confessionals in Polish churches, ix. 48

Congeries, early use of the term, iv. 46

Congreve and Lord Tennyson, parallel passages, xi. 336

Coningsby (Humphrey), of Hampton Court, co. Here- ford, vii. 349

Coniston, Lanes, sledges used for carrying slate at, x. 188

"Conjugal rights "= rites, iii. 358

Conjugate, use of the word, xi. 487

Connal (W.) on Keats : sloth, xi. 1 87

Conner (P. S. P.) on Cecil, its pronunciation, iii. 154. Curzon family, iii. 152. Hallingee, co. Chester, iii. 169. Haynes (Governor), his grandfather, vi. 88 ; vii. 415

Connett (W. W.) on ancient dogs, v. 269

Connexion and affection, false forms of the word, x; 203

" Conquering kings," in first line of hymn, viii. 363

Conservative as a political term, iv. 333 ; viii. 489 ; ix. 478 ; xi. 307

Conservative and Liberal: High and Low, viii. 150

Consett, mentioned in Baptist confession of faith, 1799, viii. 22

Consonants, double, in words, vi. 408, 496

Constable family of Battersea, i. 467

Constantine Pebble, Cornwall, xii. 506

Constantinople, church of St. Sophia at, viii. 79 ; and

derivation of Stamboul, xi. 68, 152, 213 'Constitutio Societatis Navium Bajonensium,' xi. 129

Consul of God, application of the sobriquet, xii. 506

Consumption, cure for, ii. 466, 515 ; iii. 57, 476

Contemporaries impersonated on the stage, ix. 224 Contents bills, earliest use, vi. 68 Contrast between 1344 and 1898, ii. 525 Contributors to ' N. & Q.,' obituary notices of, 1849-99

iv. 373, 411; to 1st S. i,, v.89 Convents, women chaplain in, x. 324 Conversation, Latin, x. 407, 452, 465 Convolvulus, morning glory, a variety of, vii. 209,

292, 417 Conway (Henry Seymour), 1721-95, his college, viii.

465, 529

Conway (Marshal), his letters, vi. 68 Cook (Eliza), reference wanted, x. 469 Cook (J. E.) on silhouettes of children, ii. 486 Cook (Capt. James) and John Broom, of Poole, vii. 48 Cooke family of Essex, ii. 88, 254, 314 ; iii. 74, 189 Cooke (Sir Charles), Sheriff, 1716-17, vii. 429 viii

19

Cooke (E.) on Hesketh family, viii. 64 Cooke (George), M.P. for Middlesex, i. 171 Cooke (Sir Thomas), Sheriff of London, 1692-3, ii. 187 ;

vii. 429 ; viii. 19, 149 Cooke (W. C.) on ' Burial of Sir John Moore,' xi. 214.

Met : points of the compass, x. 94. Retarded

germination of seeds, xi. 331

Cookery terms : joll, v. 69, 154 ; jipper, v. 208, 295 Cooling (J. A.) on "Capt. Rock," vii. 227 Cooling Castle, co. Kent, a singular right, iv. 105 Coolsail=wmdsail, iv. 65 Coombe (C. A.) on Grindleford Bridge, ii. 88 Coon song, origin of the term, xii. 269, 338 Coonda-oil : kunda-oil, its etymology, viii. 442 Cooper (A. L.) on battle of Seetabuldee, vii. 149

Cooper (Col. T.), vii. 168. Cowper family, vii. 8 Cooper (George), of Clarendon Park, Wilts, his death,

vii. 449

Cooper (Gilbert), his biography, ii. 147, 218 Cooper (B. C. J.) on English grammar, viii. 284 Cooper (Sidney), his 'My Life,' vi. 228 Cooper (Col. Thomas), vii. 168, 239, 353, 438 ; viii.

74 Cooper (Thompson) on E. G. K. Browne, i. 153.

Culamites, i. 378. Rutherforth (Dr. Thomas), i.

424. Scot (Robert), xi. 334. Templeman (Dr.

Peter), i. 125

Cooper's ' Athense Cantabrigienses, ' ix. 248 Co-operative trading, growth of the movement, vii.

Co-opt and co-option, authority for the words, i. 388 Coost, meaning of the word, vii. 445, 518 Cope (E. E.) on citizens of London, vi. 508. Coats of arms, v. 287. Cope (General Sir John), viii. 101. Cromwell (Oliver), his daughters, x. 289. Davison, co. Cumberland, vi. 428. Godfrey (Sir Edmund Berry), ix. 473. Haustead (Baron), v. 457. Henry, VII., vii. 110. Heraldic, vi. 170, 350. Heriot, x. 433. Mountford (Lord), v. 193. Parish registers, x. 428. Parry family, v. 132. Pewter marks, old, x. 416. Phipps family, x. 432. Preservation of silk banners, iv. 131. Registers in France, v. 516. Sampey of Boyle or Rossmoyle, xi. 209. Sergeant of the Catery, vii. 169. Tasborough, co. Suffolk, viii. 65. Trentham and Gower families, ix. 487. Vallence, Valance, or Valence, vi. 150 Wilkinson, Bishop of Chester, x. 448