Navel, Aryan words for, 406.
Neapolis, 82.
Néa-pólis, New Town, Neápolis, 117.
Nêcare, 91.
Nefa, A.S. nephew, 236.
νέκ-υς, νεκ-ρός, 91.
νέκυς, Goth. naus, 236.
Nemesis, 220.
Nepal, Buddhist priests sent to, 244.
Nesháṇi, to lead, 34.
New, Aryan words for, 411.
Newton, combinatory, 82.
New-town, combinatory, 82.
Niebuhr, Barthold, his views of the German professor’s life, 203.
—— on truthfulness, 225.
Night, Aryan words for, 404.
Nigidius Figulus, 231.
Nine, Aryan words for, 413.
νίφ-α, acc., 236.
Nirvâṇa (dying), 268.
Nix, Goth, snaiv-s, 236.
νόμος from νέμειν, 220.
Non-missionary religions, 241.
North Turanian Class, 105.
Nose, Aryan words for, 406.
Nouns (ὀνόματα), 30.
Nox, from nak, 91.
Numa, 220.
Nuti, author of “Del Governo de’ regni,” 157.
νύξ = nox, 91.
Obligatio, binding, 220.
Oc-ulus, 25.
Oculus, 28.
ὄγδοος and ὀκτώ, 230.
οἶδα and ἴσμεν, 40.
οἴκειο-ς, in the house, 94.
οἶος, one, 236.
Old, Aryan words for, 411.
—— ablatives, termination of, 44.
ὄμμα, 25.
One, Aryan words for, 412.
ὄνομα and nomen, in Persian nâm, 324.
ὀφθαλμός, 25.
ὄπ-ωπ-α, 25.
Oppert, Whitney on, 515.
Oriental studies, their claims on support, 336 seq.
Origen, 293.
Origin of language, 67.
“Origin of Chinese,” Chalmers’, 105.
“Origine des Romans, Traité de l’,” Huet, 151.
Oscan grammar, 340.
ὄσσε, 28.
ὄσσε for ὄκιε, 25.
Other, Aryan words for, 411.
Ox, cow, bull, Aryan words for, 408.
Oxford chair of Greek, 11.
—— —— Hebrew, 11.
—— —— Arabic, 12.
—— —— Anglo-Saxon, 12.
—— —— Sanskrit, 13.
Oxford chair of Latin, 13.
—— —— Comparative Philology, 13.
—— University of, claim of Oriental studies on, 337.
—— what it might do for Missions, 338.
Pada-cases, 133.
Pairidaêza in Zend, 22.
Paithya, Zend, sua-pte, 236.
Palaitiological sciences, 427.
Pandit, the, 335.
Pañcatantra, the, or Pentateuch, or Pentamerone, 141.
—— Perrette borrowed from, 142.
Pantænus, 293.
Pantschatantra, the, 183.
Parable of the man pursued by the unicorn, 170.
Para-Brahma, the, 256.
Paradise and Sanskrit paradesa, 22.
παρακολουθήματα, 31.
Paraschematic growth of early themes, 129.
Pardès in Hebrew, 22.
παρέμφασις, 31.
Parental and controversial work of missionaries, 253.
Paribhvê from paribhûs, 233.
Paris, university of, 11.
Parker, Abp., his collection of Anglo-Saxon MSS., 12.
Parlerai, je, 75.
Parsháṇi, infinitive, to cross, 34.
Parsis do not proselytize, 242.
—— in Bombay, 305.
—— their wish to increase their sect, 305.
Pat, the root, 461.
πατήρ and μήτηρ in Persian, 323.
πατήρ, πατέρα = pitấ, pitáram, 232.
Paternal missionary, the, 316.
Pâtram, from pâ, 228.
Patteson, Bishop, 254.
—— on missions, 262.
—— as an Oxford man, 338.
Pausilipo, Virgil’s tomb at, 284.
Peat deposits, 501.
Pehlevi translation of fables, 152.
πείθω, fœdus, 39.
Πηλεῦ, vocative, 233.
Peretu, Zend, bridge, portus, 236.
Perfidus, faithless, 39.
Period of Adverbs, in the Aryan language, 135.
Period of the formation of cases, in the Aryan language, 135.
Per-nic-i-es, 95.
Perrette and the Pot au Lait, 139.
—— story of, in Italian by Giulio Nuti, 190.
—— in Latin, by Petrus Possinus, from Greek, 191.
—— in Latin, by Johannes of Capua, from Hebrew, 192.
—— in German, in “Buch der alten Weisheit,” translated from the “Directorium,” 193.
—— in Spanish from Arabic (1289), 194.
—— in Latin verse by Balbo from Arabic, 195.
—— in Latin verse by Regnerius, 195.
—— in Latin sermons, 196.
—— in Spanish “El Conde Lucanor,” 197.
—— in French, by Bonaventure des Periers, 197.
Persian and Arab stories brought back by the Crusaders, 148.
Pessum dare, 132.
Phædrus’ fables, 140.
φαρέτρα, a quiver, 129.
φαῦλος, not faul, 104.
Phenician alphabet, the ultimate source of the world’s alphabets, 430, 468.
φέρετρον, a bier, 129.
φιάλη = πιϝάλη, 228.
φιαρός = pîvara, 228.
—— adjective of cream, 228.
Phlogiston, 444.
Phocion, 431.
Phonetic organs very imperfect in animals nearest to man, 440.
φορός, tribute, 129.
Photolithograph of the Mahâbhâshya, 344.
Phrygians, Greek words formed from the, 66.
φύλακος and φύλαξ, 131.
Pilpay, the Indian sage, 140, 159.
Pitá, pitáram, 232.
Pîvaras, fat, 228.
Pîvarî, young girl, 228.
πλακοῦ, vocative, 233.
Plato, his views on language, 64.
—— his “Kratylos,” 65.
πλεῖστος, 236.
Plumbum, 461.
Plunge, to, 461.
Plural in Bengali, 74.
—— of the pronoun I, 126.
Pococke, Professor of Arabic, 12.
Pœna, punishment, 217.
ποι-μήν, 32.
ποινή, pœna, Græco-Italic, according to Mommsen, 216.
Polysynthetic dialects of America, 70, 85.
Pomegranate, Aryan words for, 408.
πόνηρε, vocative, 232.
Pontifex, 134.
Portus = Zend peretu, 236.
Πόσειδον, vocative, 232.
Possinus, author of Latin translation of “Stephanites and Ichnelates,” 157.
Pott’s article on Max Müller, 80 note.
Pott on Curtius, 518.
Power of combination, 117.
Prantl on the Reform of Logic, 485.
Precession of the Equinox, 508.
Predicative roots, 121.
Prefixing languages, 85.
Prepositions, Aryan words for, 413.
Present, aorist, and reduplicated perfect, as forming a skeleton conjugation, 128.
Primary verbal period of the Aryan language, 125.
Princes, disciples of Buddha, 267.
“Principes de la Nature,” by Renouvier, 420.
“Principles of Comparative Philology,” Sayce’s, 122.
Prize fellowships, 8.
Procreate, to, root SU, Aryan words for, 415.
Pronoun I, plural of, 126.
Pronouns, Aryan words for, 413.
Proselyte, meaning of, 303.
Proselytes among the Jews, 241.
Proselytizing, etymological sense of, 306.
Protagoras, 424.
Protoplasm, 458.
Psalms and Vedic hymns contrasted, 352.
Psylli, of Egypt, the, 370.
Ptolemaic system, 444.
Purgare, for purigare, 217.
Purneah, Colebrooke at, 369.
Pūrus and pŭtus, 217.
Puteoli, St. Paul at, 284.
“Qalilag and Damnag,” 183.
—— finding the MS. of, 186.
Quantus = yâvat, 236.
“Quarterly Review,” article in the, 418.
Que, Latin, 26.
Quinô, βάνα, Zend, geni, 62.
Rρ or ρr or ρrρr+r+, third stage of language, 79.
ρ + R, second stage of language, 79.
ρ + R + ρ, second stage of language, 79.
R + ρ, second stage of language, 79.
R. R. first stage of language, 79.
Rabelais, his “Gargantua,” 161.
Races without any religious ideas, 341.
Râçta, Zend, rectus, 236.
Rajatam, 235.
Râja-ya-te, he behaves like a king, 91.
Raimond de Beziers, his transl. of “Kalila and Dimnah” into Latin verse, 161.
Rajanîkânta’s “Life of Jajadeva,” 335.
Rajmahal Koles, 347.
Rajnarain Bose, on the Brahma-Sanâj, 269.
Râmânanda, 14th century, the reformer, 256.
—— sect of, 311.
Râmânuja, 12th century, the reformer, 256.
—— sect of, 311.
Ram Dass Sen, 335.
Ram Mohun Roy and the Brahma-Samâj, 258, 311, 312, 356.
—— unable to read his own sacred books, 356.
Ranchi, Missionaries at, 347.
Rap, Zend, = repere, 237.
Rastell’s translation of the “Dialogus Creaturarum,” 162.
Rathakaras, the, 307.
Rational knowledge of Grammar, 29.
Raumer, studies of, 104.
Raw, = hrâo, 235.
Rawlinson, Sir H., 2.
Rawlinson, founder of the Oxford Chair of Anglo-Saxon, 13.
Rectus Zend, râçta, 236.
Red (Sk. harit, fulvus), 100.
Rēgĭ-fugium, not regis-fugium, 134.
Regin, cunning, 88.
Regin-hart, fox, 88.
Reinaert, fox, Low German, 89.
Religions, historical, Semitic and Aryan, 239.
—— as shown in their Scriptures, 299.
—— Missionary, 303.
—— inferences as to, drawn from their Scriptures qualified by actual observation, 299.
—— all Oriental, 328.
Religious ideas, races without, 341.
Renan, 451.
—— on “Kalilag and Damnag,” 181.
—— Whitney on, 515.
Renouvier, author of “Les Principes de la Nature,” 420.
Repere, = Zend rap, 237.
Reports sent to the Colonial Office on native races, 340.
Resemblance between Sanskrit, Greek, and Latin, Sir W. Jones on the, 323.
Ribhus, the Vedic gods, 307.
Richard, 90.
Right, Goth. raiht, 236.
Right of private judgment, 386.
Rig-Veda, the Commentary of Sayâṇâcârya, 350.
Rik-ard, a rich fellow, 89.
Robin, 503.
Robinson, Sir Hercules, 341.
Rock or Stone, Aryan words for, 408.
Roman religion in the second century, Gibbon on the, 310.
Root Period, of the undivided Aryan language, 119.
Root vis, to settle down, 112.
Roots, 463.
Roots, Ak, 28.
—— Uh, 28.
—— predicative and demonstrative, 121.
—— as postulates, or as actual words, 120.
—— not mere abstractions, 119.
—— monosyllabic forms of, 121.
—— none without concepts, 477.
Rougé, 468.
Roxburgh’s “Flora Indica,” 384.
Royal Asiatic Society, 392.
S, as original termination of feminine bases in â, 45.
“Sacred Anthology,” Conway’s, 329.
Sacred Books of Mankind, translation of, 321.
Sacred cord of the Brahmans, 260.
Sai from tva-tvi, 125.
σαι, termination of infinitive, 51.
σαι, termination of 2d pers. sing. imper. 1 aor. middle, 51.
σακέσ-παλος, 133.
“Sakuntala,” Kâlidâsa’s play of, 323.
Salâm, peace, 245 note.
Salamanca, University of, 11.
Sampradâna, dative, 49.
—— its meaning, 49.
—— its use, 49.
Saṃvâranâdaghosâḥ, 498.
Sani, sanáye, sanim, 52.
Sanna, or Chandaka, Buddha’s driver, 175.
Sanskrit, chair of, 13.
—— studied by Sassetti, 14.
—— studied by Cœurdoux, le Père, 14.
—— studied by Frederic Schlegel, 15.
—— only sound foundation of Comparative Philology, 19.
—— gerundive participle in, 95.
—— the augment in, 114.
—— fables in, 140.
—— and Zend, close union of, 212, 215.
—— most closely united with Zend (Burnouf), 215.
—— Dictionary by Târânâtha, 335.
—— scholars, old school of, 334.
—— discovery of, 363.
—— Colebrooke professor of, 381.
—— and Prakrit poetry, Colebrooke’s essay on, 381.
—— Grammar by Colebrooke, 381.
—— MSS. of Colebrooke, presented to the East India Company, 392.
—— Dictionary published by Professors Boehtlingk and Roth, 511.
—— Grammar, Max Müller’s, 519.
Sarvanâman, pronoun, 430.
Sassetti, Filippo, 14.
Satnâmis, sect of the, 314.
Saw, Sage, and Säge, 220.
Savaṇa’s Commentary, 386.
Sayce, “Principles of Comparative Philology,” 122.
σβες, not jas, 62.
Schelling, 446.
Scherer, Dr., “History of the German Language,” 101 note.
Schism in the Brahma-Samâj, 200, 209.
Schlegel, 393.
—— his knowledge of Sanskrit, 15.
Schleicher, 521.
—— his Slavonic studies, 17.
—— his Essay, “Darwinism tested by the Science of Language,” 480.
—— Whitney on, 516.
Schlüter, Dr. C. B., 330 note.
Scholars, two classes of, 395.
Schopenhauer, 446.
Schwarz the missionary, and Hyder Ali, 285.
Science, the term, 482.
—— of Language, a natural or historical science, 222.
—— —— Benfey’s History of the, 325.
—— —— a physical science, 429, 475.
—— —— an historical science, 429.
—— —— all is chaos in, 522.
—— of Man, 322.
Scrir-u-mês, we cry, 219.
Second period of Aryan language, derivative roots, 124.
Secretary of State for India in Council, 350.
See, to, root Dṛś, Aryan words for, 415. Body text DRĬS
Self-defense in, 456.
—— religions, true historical, 239.
Sendebar, or Bidpay, 158.
Sergius, a Christian, at Khalif Al-mansur’s court, 167.
Serpent, Aryan words for, 410.
Services of scholars in India, 355.
Seven, Aryan words, for, 412.
“Seven Wise Masters,” the, 166.
Seven stages of the undivided Aryan language, 118.
Seventh period of the Aryan language, 135.
Shamefast, shamefaced, 90.
Shinâ dialects, 349.
Ship or Boat, Aryan words for, 407.
Ship, in ladyship, 75.
Shradh, ancestral sacrifices, 270.
Sikh religion, 257.
Sikhs, 370.
Simple roots, first period of Aryan language, 124.
Sin, Aryan words for, 412.
Sincèrement, sincerely, 111.
Singhalese, corruption of Sanskrit, 342.
Sister, Aryan words for, 402.
Sit, to, root SAD, Aryan words for, 414.
Śiva, worship of, 309.
Six, Aryan words for, 412.
Sixth period of the Aryan language, 135.
Skeleton of logical statement, 434.
Sky, Heaven, Aryan words for, 404.
Slavonic, studied by Miklosich and Schleicher, 7.
—— is most closely united with German (Grimm, Schleicher), 215.
Sleep, Aryan words for, 411.
Small boat, Aryan words for, 407.
Snake charmers of India, 370.
Société de Linguistique, 67.
Socin, Dr. Albert, 185.
Sokrates and Æsop’s fables, 139.
Son, Aryan words for, 401.
Son-in-law, Aryan words for, 403.
Son’s son, Aryan words for, 402.
σῶτερ, vocative, 232.
Sound, Aryan words for, 411.
Sound, broad degrees of, 437.
South Turanian class, 105.
Southern division of the Aryans, 212.
Spanish translation of fables, called “Calila é Dymna,” 161.
Species, a thing of human workmanship, 438.
—— Darwin’s book an attempt to repeal the term, 439.