Khayuna dialects, iv. 349.
Khosru Nushirvan, iv. 183.
—— his physician, iv. 152.
Khrûma, Zend = Sk. krûra, crudus, iv. 235.
Khrûta, Zend, adj. of zim, winter, iv. 235.
King, Aryan words for, iv. 407.
Kingdom, iv. 75.
—— Aryan words for, iv. 407.
Kingsley, iii. 489.
—— and the Saturday Review, iii. 480.
Kistvaen, or cistvaen, iii. 267, 269.
Kitt’s Cotty House, iii. 267.
Klaus Groth, on Friesian, iii. 123 note.
—— political poems, iii. 133.
—— Vertellen, iii. 146.
κλάζω = κράζω (clu), iv. 219.
κλέος = hruom, iv. 219.
Klinger, iii. 82.
Klopstock, iii. 40–42, 82, 84.
Knee, Aryan words for, iv. 406.
Know, to, root JÑA, Aryan words for, iv. 415. Body text JNYA
—— root VID, Aryan words for, iv. 415.
Knowledge for its own sake, danger of, iv. 320.
Koelle’s sixty-seven African languages, iii. 427.
—— Theodore, iii. 86.
Koles, the, iv. 347.
—— language of, Dravidian, iv. 347.
Königsberg School, the, iii. 37.
Konrad’s Roland, iii. 9.
Konrad von Würzburg, iii. 15.
Kontablacos, iii. 67.
Koran, spirit of the, iv. 245.
Kosmos of language, iii. 450.
-κρατης = hard, iv. 88.
Kratu, intellectual strength, iv. 88.
Kratylos, Plato’s, iv. 65.
κράζω = κλάζω (clu ?), iv. 219.
κρῖμα = crimen, Græco-Italic, according to Mommsen, iv. 218, 219.
κρύος, κρυμός, κρύσταλλος, iv. 235.
κυμαίους, ὄνος παρά, iv. 150.
Kûmârâ-ya te, he behaves like a girl, iv. 91.
Laboulaye, iii. 446.
—— on Barlaam and Josaphat, iv. 177.
Ladyship, iv. 75.
La Fontaine’s fables, iv. 139.
—— published 1668, iv. 140.
—— 2d and 3d editions, 1678, 1694, iv. 140.
—— fable of Perrette borrowed from the Pañcatantra, iv. 142.
—— and David Sahid of Ispahan’s translation of Pilpay’s fables, iv. 159.
Lagu, law, iv. 220.
Lalita Vistara, the, iv. 171.
Lamprecht’s “Alexander,” iii. 9.
Language of the Swabian court, iii. 8.
—— of Luther, iii. 24.
—— of Joinville, iii. 166.
—— the Kosmos of, iii. 450.
—— stratification of, iv. 63.
—— origin of, iv. 67.
—— universal, iv. 67.
—— English, 100,000 words in, iv. 68.
—— classification of, iv. 72.
—— made by convention, iv. 73.
—— three conditions of, iv. 78.
—— RR for 1st stage, iv. 79.
—— R + ρ for 2d stage, iv. 79.
—— ρ for 3d stage, iv. 79.
—— not highly developed, rich in words, poor in general expressions, iv. 122.
—— Science of, is it a natural or historical science, iv. 222.
—— human beings without, iv. 341.
—— Veddahs said to have none, iv. 342.
—— of the Koles and Gonds, iv. 347.
—— natural growth or historical change in, iv. 422.
—— the specific difference of man, iv. 441.
—— none without roots, iv. 460.
—— and thought inseparable, iv. 484.
Languages in India, the primitive, iii. 422.
—— families of, iv. 70.
—— isolating, combinatory, and inflectional, iv. 79.
—— suffixing, prefixing, affixing, and infixing, iv. 85.
Lardner’s “Credibilia,” iv. 287.
La Rivey, his translations of fables, iv. 159 note.
—— and Burnouf, Whitney on, iv. 515.
Latin, use of, iii. 29.
—— and English words in Cornish, iii. 256.
—— words in Cornish, iii. 261.
—— inscriptions, iii. 419.
—— chair of, iv. 13.
—— Corssens studies in, iv. 17.
—— text of the Milkmaid, iv. 163 note.
—— Church, first day of SS. Barlaam and Josaphat, iv. 177.
—— a language made up of Italic, Greek, and Pelasgic, iv. 206.
—— derived from Greek, iv. 206.
—— most closely united with Greek (Mommsen, Curtius), iv. 215.
Laud, Archbishop, his support of Arabic, iv. 12.
—— his collection of Arabic MSS., iv. 12.
Laudari a viro laudato, iv. 512.
Lautverschiebung, iv. 101 note, 102.
Law, no settled word for, in the Aryan languages, iv. 220.
—— of the Excluded Middle, iv. 434.
Laws of Manu., iv. 323.
—— of Nature, unsuspected, iv. 426.
Laymen, work of, iv. 293.
—— assistance of, iv. 293.
Leader, the, iii. 401.
Leccardo, a gourmand, iv. 90.
Lecture on Christ by Keshub Chunder Sen, iv. 272.
“Lectures on the English Language,” Marsh’s, iv. 431.
Lectureships for Hebrew, Arabic, and Chaldaic proposed in 1311, iv. 11.
Leibnitz, iii. 39.
—— his views on language, iv. 65.
—— shows that Greek and Latin are not derived from Hebrew, iv. 207.
Leiche, body, iv. 23.
Leik, body, iv. 23.
Leitner, Dr., his labors in Dardistan, iv. 348.
λελοιπ-έναι, iv. 34.
Lengthening of the vowel in the subjunctive, iv. 114.
Leo Allatius and the story of Barlaam and Josaphat, iv. 178.
Leo the Isaurian, iv. 161.
Leofric, Bishop of Exeter, iii. 324.
Leopardi, iii. 362.
Leopold, Duke of Austria, iii. 12.
Leprosy, iii. 237.
Lepsius, iii. 362, 439; iv. 2.
—— on Egyptian chronology, iii. 396.
—— his “Minna von Barnhelm,” iii. 42.
—— his “Emilia Galotti,” iii. 42.
—— his “Nathan,” iii. 42.
—— his influence, iii. 84.
—— and forgotten books, iii. 232.
—— Pastor Goeze the critic of, iv. 518.
Λητοῖ, vocative, iv. 233.
Leumund, iv. 218.
Lewis, Sir G. C., iii. 239.
Lhuyd, Mr. Ed., d. 1709, and his Cornish Grammar, iii. 245.
Lich, lichgate, iv. 23.
Liebhart, mignon, iv. 89 note.
Liebrecht, Dr. Felix, iv. 164 note.
Liebrecht, on Barlaam and Josaphat, iv. 177.
Ligare, to bind, iv. 220.
Light, broad degrees of, iv. 437.
—— lucere, iv. 467.
Lines and limits in nature, iv. 437.
Linguardo, a talker, iv. 90.
Linguistic survey of India, iv. 346.
Lionesse, the countrie of, iii. 322.
Lion’s skin, the, in Plato’s “Kratylos,” iv. 150 note.
λιπαρός, iv. 229.
Liscow, iii. 40.
Literary survey of India, the, iv. 346.
Lives of saints, the, interest of, iii. 300.
“Livre des Lumières” by David Sahid of Ispahan, iv. 160.
Local adverbs, as terminations of cases, iv. 96.
Locative in i, as infinitive, iv. 50.
—— in sani, as infinitive, iv. 55.
Locatives, old, iv. 208.
Locher, iii. 68.
Locke, iv. 446.
—— philosophy of, iii. 218.
Lockhart, iii. 402.
Loewe, Dr., iv. 487.
Loftus, iii. 433.
Logan stones, iii. 278.
Logau, Friedrich von, iii. 38.
Logic, Prantl on reform of, iv. 486.
Logical statement, skeleton of, iv. 434.
λόγος, not lex, iv. 219.
Logos, the, iv. 455.
Lohenstein, iii. 38.
London in the 16th century, iii. 234.
Loss of MS. of the Veda, iii. 401.
Lother and Maler, iii. 70.
Louis le Hutin, his library, iii. 157.
Louis III., lay on his victory over the Normans, iii. 6.
Louis IX., iii. 177, and the Bishop of Paris, iii. 182.
Louis XIV., iii. 32.
—— court of, iii. 33.
Lourdement, heavily, iv. 112.
Love songs, Old German, iii. 51.
Low German, iii. 121.
—— dialects, iii. 122.
Lu in Telugu, iv. 82.
Lübeck, home of Chasot, iii. 210.
Lucien Buonaparte, iii. 423.
Ludwig, King, iii. 5.
Lunar Zodiac of the Hindus, iv. 508.
λῦσαι, infinitive, iv. 51, 57.
—— his language, iii. 24.
—— his Table Talk, iii. 62.
Lycians, the true Pelasgians, iii. 396.
Ma, tva, ta, iv. 113.
Mâ and μή prohibitivum, iv. 213.
—— Lord, on Christian differences, iv. 290.
—— —— on Bacon, iii. 227.
Madenhood, iii. 236.
Madh, Zend, to cure, mederi, iv. 236.
Madras, Colebrooke’s arrival at, iv. 364.
Mahâbhâshya, new edition of, iv. 335.
—— photo-lithograph of, iv. 344.
Mahon, iii. 407.
Mahrattas, the, Buddhist priests sent to, iv. 244.
μαι, for mâma, iv. 125.
“Maid of Orleans,” Schiller’s, iii. 92, 97.
Mamânsaka philosophers, iv. 386.
Malayo-Polynesian family, iv. 70.
Mallet, Gilles, iii. 158.
Mammoth, age of the, iii. 319.
Man, a suffix, iv. 33.
Man, Zend, manere, iv. 236.
—— Aryan words for, iv. 405.
—— an amphibious creature, iv. 477.
—— pursued by a unicorn, parable of, iv. 170.
Mane, Sanskrit termination, iv. 32.
Manere, iv. 236.
Man-hâd, iv. 88.
Manouses, Professor, his lectures on the Greeks, iii. 251.
Mansel, iv. 446.
Manuel, Don Juan, his “Conde Lucanor,” iv. 164.
Mar, mard, mardh, marg, mark, marp, śmar, iv. 122.
Mâra, his interview with Buddha, iv. 268.
Mârâh, Zion, iii. 293.
March, Dr., on Infinitive, iv. 58.
—— his Anglo-Saxon Grammar, iv. 421.
Marchadion, iii. 297.
Marchadyon, iii. 294.
Mardîn, library of, iv. 186.
Margravine of Baireuth, the, iii. 203.
Maria Theresa, iii. 124.
“Mark Bozzari,” Müller’s “Griechen Lieder,” iii. 108.
Marriages in India between those of different rank, iv. 377.
Marsh’s “Lectures on the English Language,” iv. 431.
Martin, Theodore, his translation of the “Griechen Lieder,” iii. 108, 111.
“Martyrologium Romanum,” the, iv. 169 note.
“Mary Stuart,” Schiller’s, iii. 92, 96.
Masi, from ma-tvi, iv. 125.
Master Eckhardt, iii. 419.
Mastersingers, iii. 16.
Mâtấ, mâtáram, iv. 232.
Mathilde, daughter of Henry II., iii. 12.
—— of Saxony, iii. 60.
Matthias of Beheim translates the Bible, iii. 21.
Maximilian the Emperor, iii. 17.
Max Müller, letters from Bunsen to, iii. 393.
Mayas, delight, iv. 55.
Meco, iv. 117.
Mederi, Zend, madh, iv. 236.
Meissel, Celtes, iii. 29.
Meistersänger, the, iii. 31.
—— their poetry, iii. 69.
Melanchthon, iii. 29.
—— his letters, iii. 62.
μέλαθρον, iv. 236.
μέλδετε = mṛḷata, iv. 234.
Meldorf, home of K. Niebuhr, iii. 127.
Melidunum, Moulton, iii. 293.
Melusina, iii. 70.
“Mémoire sur la Langue de Joinville,” par De Wailly, iii. 165 note.
“Mémoires de Trévoux,” iii. 192.
μέμονα and μέμαμεν, iv. 40.
μεναι, infinitive in, iv. 33.
Mên-an-tol, or holed stones, iii. 271, 283.
—— their origin, iii. 284.
Menard, his edition of Joinville, iii. 160.
Mên-rock, iii. 306.
Mên Scrifa, the, iii. 271.
Mendelssohn, iii. 362.
“Merchant of Venice,” story of the caskets, iv. 170 note.
“Merigarto,” hybrid style of, iii. 8.
Merivale, Herman, and Jews in Cornwall, iii. 310.
Metaphysique, Bacon’s, iii. 223.
μέτηρ, μητέρα = matấ, mâtáram, iv. 232.
Method of Induction, Bacon’s, iii. 225.
Meyer, Martin, iii. 63.
Mi, si, ti, iv. 113.
Michelstow, iii. 336.
Middle High German, iii. 9.
Migration of Fables, iv. 139.
Miklosich, his Slavonic studies, iv. 17.
Milkmaid, the fable of the, first appearance in English, iv. 164.
—— instead of the Brahman, iv. 165.
Mill, John Stuart, iv. 318.
Mill, Dr., iv. 336.
Min Jehann, iii. 137.
Mincamber or Mânamber, iii. 277.
Mind, Aryan words for, iv. 405.
—— what is meant by, iv. 436.
—— of animals, a terra incognita, iv. 442.
Minne, meaning, of, iii. 56.
Minnesänger, the, iii. 9.
“Minnesangs Frühling,” iii. 53, 61.
Minute differences, many words for, in languages not highly developed, iv. 122.
Miracles, related by Joinville, iii. 185.
Mirzapur, Colebrooke at, iv. 374.
—— Colebrooke returns to, iv. 381.
Missionaries, Irish and English, iii. 4.
Missionary and Non-missionary religions, iv. 241.
Missionary religions, iv. 241, 303.
—— religion what constitutes a, iv. 306.
—— societies, iv. 290.
—— societies, claim on, for Oriental studies, iv. 337.
Missions, iv. 238.
—— Stanley’s Sermon on, iv. 276.
—— should be more helped by the universities, iv. 338.
Misteries, the, iii. 69.
μισθός, Goth. mizdô, iv. 236.
Mîzdha, Zend, μισθός, iv. 236.
μόχθηρε, vocative, iv. 232.
Modern languages, their importance, iv. 523.
Modus infinitus, iv. 31.
Mohammedanism, countries professing, iv. 252.
Mollwitz, battle of, iii. 206.
Mommsen, Theodore, iii. 129.
“Monatliche Unterredungen,” iii. 194.
Mongol words from Chinese, iv. 105.
Mongolian and Chinese, iv. 106.
—— conquerors carry Buddhist fables to Russia, iv. 149.
—— translation of Kalila and Dimnah, iv. 149 note.
Monosyllabic form of roots, iv. 121.
Monstra, iv. 72.
Montaigne on the French language, iii. 164.
Month, Aryan words for, iv. 404.
Mont St. Michel in Normandy, iii. 326.
Moon, Aryan words for, iv. 403.
Moors, or Hindustani, iv. 365.
More, Sir Thomas, iv. 293.
Moreman, teaches English in Cornwall, iii. 244.
Morgenstunde hat Gold im Munde, iv. 144.
Morier, iii. 408.
Morris, Dr., on Infinitive, iv. 58.
Moscherosch, iii. 38.
Moslim, iv. 245.
Mother, Aryan words for, iv. 401.
Mother-in-law, Aryan words for, iv. 403.
Moulton, Melidunum, iii. 293.
Mountain, Aryan words for, iv. 424.
Mount Calvary, Cornish poem, iii. 257.
Mount Garganus in Apulia, iii. 326, 332.
Mouse, Aryan words for, iv. 410.
Mouth, Aryan words for, iv. 406.
Mule, Aryan words for, iv. 408.
Müller, Dr. Friedrich, iv. 74 note.
Müller, Ottfried, and Comparative Philology, iv. 209.
Müller, Wilhelm, iii. 100.
—— his enjoyment of nature, iii. 103.
—— his life at Dessau, iii. 107.
—— his “Griechen Lieder,” iii. 107.
—— pupil of Wolf, iii. 113.
—— his “Homerische Vorschule,” iii. 113.
Munda dialects and the Khasian language, iv. 348.
—— and the Talaing of Pegu, iv. 348.
Mundas or Koles, dialects of, iv. 347.
Mure, iii. 419.
Musket, iv. 503.
Mysore, Buddhist priests sent to, iv. 244.
Mystery plays in Cornish, iii. 258, 259.
Mystics, iii. 18.
Naaman, iv. 278.
Nacheinander, iv. 33.
Naçu, Zend, corpse, νέκυς, iv. 236.