J
- Japanese, (205) (207)
- Jutes, (224)
- Juxtaposing. See Agglutination.
K
- Karok (N. California), (220) (229)
- K. Indians, (227)
- Khmer. See Cambodgian.
- Knowledge, source of, as grammatical category, (115)
- Koine, (162)
- Kwakiutl (British Columbia), (81) (97) (98)
L
- Labial trills, (53)
- Language:
- associations in, (38) (39)
- associations underlying elements of, (10) (11)
- auditory cycle in, (17)
- concepts expressed in, (12)
- a cultural function, (2) (10)
- definition of, (7)
- diversity of, (21-3)
- elements of, (24-38)
- emotion expressed in, (39-41)
- feeling-tones in, (41) (42)
- grammatical concepts of, (86-126)
- grammatical processes of, (59-85)
- historical aspects of, (157-204)
- imitations of sounds, not evolved from, (5) (6)
- influences on, exotic, (205-20)
- interjections, not evolved from, (5)
- literature and, (236-47)
- modifications and transfers of typical form of, (17-21)
- an “overlaid” function, (8)
- psycho-physical basis of, (8) (9)
- race, culture and, (221-35)
- simplification of experience in, (11) (12)
- sounds of, (43-58)
- structure of, (127-56)
- thought and, (12-17) (232) (233)
- universality of, (21-3)
- variability of, (157-65)
- volition expressed in, (39-41)
- Larynx, (48-50)
- Lateral sounds, (52) (53)
- Latin:
- attribution, (101)
- concord, (121)
- infixing, (26) (75)
- influence of, (206) (207) (215) (216)
- objective -m, (119) (120)
- order of words, (65) (66) (123)
- plurality, (100)
- prefixes and suffixes, (71)
- reduplicated perfects, (82) (216)
- relational concepts expressed, (101) (102)
- sentence-word, (33) (36)
- sound as word in, single, (24)
- structure, (151) (154)
- style, (243) (244)
- suffixing character, (134) (137)
- syntactic nature of sentence, (116) (118)
- synthetic character, (135) (137)
- verse, (244) (245) (246)
- word and element in, analysis of, (27) (29) (30)
- Lettish, (49)
- Leveling, phonetic, (193) (194) (195)
- See Analogical leveling.
- Lips, (48)
- Literature:
- Literature, determinants of:
- Lithuanian, (55) (175) (183)
- Localism, (161)
- Localization of speech, (8) (9)
- Loucheux (N. Amer.), (71)
- L. Indians, (228)
- Lungs, (48)
- Luther, German of, (192)
M
- Malay, (132)
- M. race, (227)
- Malayan, (227)
- Malayo-Polynesian languages, (219) (221) (227)
- Manchu, (80)
- Manx, (225)
- “Maus, Mäuse” (German), history of, (184) (185) (191-3)
- Mediterranean race, (223)
- Melanesian languages, (227) (230)
- Meter. See Verse.
- Milton, (242)
- Mixed-relational languages, (146) (147) (154)
- Modality, (90) (91) (92) (93) (114)
- Mon-Khmer (S.E. Asia), (219)
- Moore, George, (242)
- Morphological features, diffusion of, (217-20)
- Morphology. See Structure, linguistic.
- “Mouse, mice” (English), history of, (184-93)
- Munda languages (E. India), (219)
- Murmuring, (50)
- Mutation, vocalic, (184) (185) (197-9) (203) (204)
N
- Nahuatl (Mexico), (69) (70)
- Nasal sounds, (51)
- “Nasal twang,” (51)
- Nasalized stops, (52)
- Nass (British Columbia), (62) (81)
- Nationality, (222) (227) (228)
- Navaho (Arizona, New Mexico), (71) (77) (83) (136)
- N. Indians, (228)
- Nietzsche, (241)
- Nootka (Vancouver Id.), (29) (33) (35) (68) (70) (74) (79) (82) (95) (109-11) (135) (141-3) (151)
- Nose, (48)
- Noun, (123) (124) (126)
- Nouns, classification of, (113)
- Number, (90) (91) (93) (114)
- See Plurality.
O
- Object, (92) (98)
- See Personal relations.
- Ojibwa (N, Amer.), (55)
- Onomatopoetic theory of origin of speech, (5) (6)
- Oral sounds, (51-4)
- Order, word, (64-6) (91) (92)
- Organs of speech, (7) (8) (47) (48)
- action of, (48-54)
P
- Paiute (N. Amer.), (31) (32) (36) (52) (53) (69) (70)
- Palate, (48)
- Pali (India), (207)
- Papuan languages, (227)
- Papuans, (227) (230)
- Parts of speech, (123-5) (126)
- Pattern:
- Persian, (163) (207)
- Person, (114)
- Personal relations, (91) (92) (93) (115)
- Phonetic adaptation, (210) (211)
- Phonetic diffusion, (211-15)
- Phonetic law:
- Phonetic processes,
- Pitch, grammatical use of, (83-5)
- Plains Indians, gesture language of, (20)
- “Plattdeutsch,” (224) (225)
- Plurality:
- Poles, (225)
- Polynesian, (132) (150) (155) (227) (230)
- Polynesians, (221) (222) (227) (230)
- Polysynthetic languages, (130) (135) (146) (148) (150) (151)
- Portuguese, (137)
- Predicate, (37) (126)
- Prefixes, (26) (64) (70) (71-5)
- Prefixing languages, (134) (135)
- Preposition, (125)
- Psycho-physical aspect of speech, (8) (9)
- Pure-relational languages, (145) (147) (154) (155)
Q
- Qualifying concepts. See Concepts, derivational.
- Quality
- Quantity of speech sounds, (55) (64)
R
- Race, (221) (222)
- Radical concepts. See Concepts.
- Radical element, (26-32)
- Radical word, (28) (29)
- “Reading from the lips,” (19)
- Reduplication, (64) (79-82)
- Reference, definite and indefinite, (89) (90)
- Repetition of stem, (26)
- See Reduplication.
- Repression of impulse, (167) (168)
- Rhyme, (245) (246)
- Rolled consonants, (53)
- Romance languages, (137)
- Root, (25)
- Roumanian, (137)
- Rounded vowels, (52)
- Russian, (44) (45) (54) (71) (80) (163) (212)
S
- Sahaptin languages (N. Amer.), (220)
- Salinan (S.W. California), (150) (155)
- Sanskrit (India), (54) (75) (82) (151) (154) (175) (200) (207) (209) (210)
- Sarcee Indians, (228)
- Saxon:
- Saxons, (224) (225)
- Scandinavian, (224)
- Scandinavians, (224)
- Scotch, (224) (226)
- Scotch, Lowland, (188)
- Semitic languages, (61) (68) (76) (134) (151) (219) (228)
- Sentence, (33) (36-8)
- Sequence. See Order of words.
- Shakespeare:
- Shasta (N. California), (220)
- Shilh (Morocco), (77) (81)
- Shilluk (Nile headwaters), (84) (150) (154) (155)
- Siamese, (55) (66) (70) (207)
- Singing, (50)
- Siouan languages (N. Amer.), (76)
- Sioux (Dakota), (29) (76) (95) (150)
- Slavic languages, (212)
- Slavs, (225)
- Somali (E. Africa), (77) (80) (81)
- Soudanese languages, (84) (154) (155) (163)
- Sound-imitative words, (4) (5) (6) (80)
- Sounds of speech, (24)
- adjustments involved in, muscular, (46)
- adjustments involved in certain, inhibition of, (46) (47)
- basic importance of, (43)
- classification of, (54) (54)
- combinations of, (56)
- conditioned appearance of, (56) (57)
- dynamics of, (55) (56)
- illusory feelings in regard to, (43-5)
- “inner” or “ideal” system of, (57) (58)
- place in phonetic pattern of, (194-6)
- production of, (47-54)
- values of, psychological, (56-8)
- variability of, (45) (46)
- Spanish, (137)
- Speech. See Language.
- Spirants, (52)
- Splitting of sounds, (193) (195)
- Stem, (26)
- Stock, linguistic, (163-5) (218) (221)
- Stopped consonants (or stops), (52)
- Stress. See Accent.
- Structure, linguistic, (127-56)
- Structure, linguistic, types of:
- classification of, by character of concepts, (143-7)
- by degree of fusion, (136-43)
- by degree of synthesis, (135) (136)
- by formal processes, (133-5)
- from threefold standpoint, (147-9) (154)
- into “formal” and “formless,” (132) (133)
- classifying, difficulties in, (129-32) (149)
- examples of, (149-51)
- mixed, (148)
- reality of, (128) (129) (149) (152) (153)
- validity of conceptual, historical test of, (152-6)
- Style, (38) (216) (242-4)
- Subject, (92) (98)
- See Personal relations.
- Subject of discourse, (37) (126)
- Suffixes, (26) (64)
- Suffixing, (61) (70) (71-5)
- Suffixing languages, (134) (135)
- Survivals, morphological, (149) (152) (202) (218) (219)
- Swedish, (55) (110) (175)
- Swinburne, (238) (240)
- Swiss, French, (225)
- Syllabifying, (56)
- Symbolic languages, (133) (134) (147) (150) (151)
- Symbolic processes, (134) (138) (139) (140)
- Symbolic-fusional, (151)
- Symbolic-isolating, (148)
- Symons, (245)
- Syntactic adhesions, (117) (118)
- Syntactic relations:
- primary methods of expressing, (119) (120)
- transfer of values in, (120)
- See Concepts, relational; Concord; Order, word; Personal relations; Sentence.
- Synthetic tendency, (69) (135) (136) (137) (148) (150) (151) (154)