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GENERAL INDEX'.

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Acts of a primitive society, 272.
Actual knowledge, 588.
Actuality, Dasein, 588 note.
AD, DÂ, to divide, 242, 358.
Adam, new and old, 155.
Adhvaryus, hundred branches of the,
339.

A-diti, boundless, 185 note.

Adjectives, at first formed like sub-
stantives, 442.

can be used as substantives, 442.
are they general or singular terms?
447.

are they abstract or concrete terms?
463.

treated by Mill as concrete, 463,
469.

abstract terms derived from, 464.
originally appellatives, 526.

afterwards attributives, 526.
all were once substantives, 526.
A-dya, now, 227.
Aelian, time of, 122.

Aesthetics, or subjective evolution,
290.
Aga, goat, 82.

Agassiz's divisions of the animal
kingdom, 104 note.

Agglutination, or adaptation, 223.
- Ludwig on, 228.

Agglutinative period of Aryan speech,

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1 I have been relieved of the trouble of making this index by the same

kind hand that helped me in preparing those of my former books.

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305.

AnG, root for painting, 303.

Angle, none without two converging
lines, 30.

Animal and man, language the spe-
cific difference between, 163.
thing that breathes, 458.

to man, transition from, 504.
inconceivable, 158.

Animals, teaching of, by men, 10.
not guided by reason, 12.
Mill on, 12-13.

intelligence of, useless arguments
from, 15.

are automatic machines, 15.
percepts of, 26.

Schopenhauer on, 177.

sounds of, uncertainty in imitating,

192.

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Aristotle and the tricoloured rain-
bow, 303.

Aristotle's definition of an enuncia-
tion, 422.

ten categories, 424.

categories, objections to, 430.
abstraction, 451.

artificial metaphors, 488.

oldest division of metaphors, 491.
Categ. c. 6, ἀπόφασις δέ ἐστιν ἀπό-
φανσίς τινος ἀπό τινος, 402.

Arithmetics, the science of time, 598.
Ar-ms, Gothic, arm, 398.
ápovpa, arvum, 398.
ȧpopóv, membrum, 398.

Articulate words, difficulty of render-
ing natural sounds by, 189.
Artus, link, 398.

Aryan roots, number of, 210.
Aryavarta, east of Âdarsa, west of
Kalakavana, south of Himavat,
and north of Pâriyâtra, 338.

As, the termination, 237.

AS, to be, to breathe, 221, 384.
AS, SA, to throw, 358.
AS, SA, to sharpen, 358.
Ascoli, 365, 366 note.
As-k, and ax, 367.

Associated, things generally, 512.
Association, 603.
Asvâsas, 237.
At, and At, 349.

Atharvana-veda, nine divisions of the,

339.

Atman, self, 221, 611.

Attention, the dawn of thought, 4.
Wendel Holmes on, 4 note.

F. H. Bradley on, 4 note.
Attributes, all names of, abstract, 80,
460, 528.

constant and essential, render cer-
tain names impossible, 592.
separable and inseparable, 593.
essential, 593.

accidental, 595.

essential, i. e. nominal, 595.

Augment, less perfect reduplication,

243.

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Bahvrikya, twenty-one divisions of

the, 339.

Bain, Professor, 590.
BANDH, root, to bind, 413.

Bateman, Darwinism tested by lan-

guage, 172 note, 201 note.

- on Aphasia, 154, 155.
Bathybius, the, 154, 155, 171.
Battering-ram, 489.
Begriff, 72.
Begriffe, 2, 560.

ohne Anschauungen sind leer, 143.
Bellum omnium contra omnes, 290.
Benfey, 351, 353, 358 note, 377.
Berkeley, 119, 132, 143, 263, 267,
269, 459, 492, 506, 513.
ideas, 20 note.

ideas and words, 42.

a nihilist, egoist, and idealist, 73.
his views of the phenomenal world,
131.

denies the existence of general
ideas, 259.

and Locke, mean percept by idea,
259.

on notions or universal ideas, 260.
denies abstract general ideas, 260.
his account of abstraction, 262.
signs of particular ideas, i. e. ab-
stract ideas, 456.

on attributes, 448.

on abstraction, 453.

- his idea meant picture, 453.
on notion, 454.

forswore the use of words, 617.
BHÂ, to shine and to sound, 401, 402.
BHÂ and BHÁS, 360.

Bha, forming names of animals, 232.
BHA, to bear, ep, 484.
BHASH and BHAN, dialectic forms
produced by indigenous races,

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Bitter is biting, 305, 602.
Bitterness, sensation of, 601.

Black, brown, yellow, and white men
descendants of common ances-

tors, 115.

not descended from one

pair, 157.

Black, bleak, 304.
Black and blue, 304.

Blackhorn, same as whitehorn, 62.
Blár, blá, blác, 304.

Blue, livid colour of a bruise, 304.
Bodley, Sir T., letter of, 21 note.
Boehtlingk, 379 note.

Boller, Die Declination der Finnischen
Sprachen, 235.

Bopp, 208, 209, 213, 227, 233.
on suffixes, 225.

Bowels of compassion, 507.
Bow-wow theory, 174.

and pooh-pooh theory, 181, 206.
pooh! 196.

Bradley, F. H., on attention, 4 note.
Brahman, Self, 611.

Brain of animals and men, arguments
from, 6.

of gorilla, size of, 6.
human, 6.

of Australians, 6.

- affection of left side of anterior
lobe, 202.

cannot think, though perhaps a
sine quâ non of intellect, 574-
Broad lines in the evolution of nature,
93, 94, 102, 103.

-

which separate different kinds, 98,
99, 100.

which change Chaos into a Kosmos,
167.

Broca, Dr., on the brain, 202.
Brutes have no faculty of abstracting,
258.

use of words, 258.
Bubo, owl, 193.
Bubulare, 194.

Buddhists forbade all speculation on

the beginning of things, 101.

Caesius, bluish, bluish-grey, 304, 483-
Calin, a wheedler, 504.

Call separated from kaλeiv, 203.
Candere, Lat., 373.

Carbonic acid and water, will they
make starch? 109.

Care and cura, separation of, 203.
Casco, potsherd, skull, 509.
Case-terminations local, 239.
Casilla, head, 509.

Castrum, casa, cassis, 370.
Categories, of the understanding,
138, 597, 601.

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Category of objectivity, 288.

of causality, 288.

the first, substance, 426, 441.

the eighth the most difficult, 428.
Cato, 319.

Causality, 601.

Kant's view of, 148.

Schopenhauer on Kant's view of,
149.

Helmholtz on, 150.

Causation, same with Mill as order
of time, 605.

Cause and effect, Hume on, 140.

to effect, transition from, 511.
Cena, from Sabine scesna, 370.
Cerebrisation, unconscious, 17.
Certainty, attained from experience,
nominal not essential, 607.
Chamisso on species and genera, 168
note.

Charta, from SKAR, 556.
Chârûz, Hebrew, gold, 564 note.
Chellean man, the, 86.

Child, a, and early framers of lan-

guage, difference between, 522.
Children, earliest education of, 12.
learn words, how? 269, 519.
Chimpanzee, 87 note.

Chinese, 180, 193, 192, 194, 308, 437.

roots in, 241.

Xλwpós, helvus, yellow, 304.

Xpu-aós, not from Hebrew chârûz,
564.

Xp@ua, colour, Xpús, skin, 303.
XOCós, hesternus, 227.

Cicero, Latin of, 253.

on metaphors, 493.

Clamor concomitans and significans,

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Comte, 144.

Renan on, 144 note.

Huxley on, 145 note.

Conceivable, meaning of, 159.

and inconceivable, H. Spencer's
compromise, 586.

H. Spencer's later view, 587.
Conceiving is imagining, forming a
mental picture, 454-455.

Concept, 19.

Conception, 19-20.

the, becomes the type of the com-
parison, 455.

Concepts (Begriffe), 2.

can they exist by themselves? 229.
- function of forming general, the
distinguishing mark between men
and animals, 178.

origin of, the fundamental ques-
tion of philosophy, 256.
creation of, early achieved, 272.
cannot be framed without names,
273.

Concepts or Roots, 475.

the 121 original, 404, 551.

further reduction of, 406.

- by themselves are nothing, 563.
Concrete, not an Aristotelian term,
452.

the quality grown together with
the substance, 452.
as meaning solid, 452.
the same as singular, 457.

name, the name of an object, 467.
Concursus divinus of Descartes, 278,
281.

Condillac and his school, 21.

all science is a well-made lan-

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DÂ, Sanskrit root, 183, 184, 188,
346, 392, 478.

its three stems, 184 note, 191.

DÂ, to purify, 185.

DÂ and DÂS, 360.

DÂ, to root, to bind, 413.
DAK, 478.

DAM, to shape, to control, 387.
Dâ-mâ-tvi, damus, 233.
Dante on the name of God, 283.
DR and DRS, 360.

DABH and DARH, roots, to tie into
a bunch, 412.

DAMH, DARBH, tying together, 387.
DARS, to see, 555.

Darwin, 89, 94, 99, 105, III, 118,

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-

123, 153, 157, 163, 173, 182,
576, 580.

not the discoverer of evolution,
90.

differs from the Darwinians, 104.

on agnosticism, 107.

and Kant, 152.

on the Descent of Man, 160.

followers of, 118, 120, 154, 179,
289.

- against language as a specific differ-
ence, 169.

-

did he retract his theory? 298.
Darwin's Philosophy of Language,
Lectures on, 92, 153.

theory of evolution, 89, 579.
- inconsistency, 104.

different beginnings, 111.
insensible degrees, 164.
theory of language, 296.

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Dâ-trám, da-tram, 184.
Da-tram, an instrument, 225.
Daughter, origin of, 506.
Dauh-t-s, feast, 506 note.

Day, separated from dies, 203.
Dei, daughter, from root Duh, 335-
dn, for difn, 227.

Deaf and dumb people, 63.
Definition and history of words, 581.
necessity of, 610.
dewas, very, 508.

Delaware, name for horse, 53.
Demokritos, 174.

knew only a few colours, 303.
Demonstrative elements, 221, 256.

-

traced to conceptual roots, 221.
independent words mistaken
for, 228.

survivals of a time when gesture
and pantomime were largely
used, 554.

Demonstrative roots or elements, 241.
De Mortillet, Professor, 86.
dhy, long, for difŋv, 227.
Denominative roots, 347.

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Dentals corrupted into linguals, 350.
Desasnar, to enlighten, 505.

Descent of Man, Darwin on the, 160.
De-sci-sco, Latin, 357.

Deserve' a name, to, 532.
Despecialising process, 308.
Development, 166.

DHÂ, used in Greek for the differ-
entiation of roots, 351.

Dhâtu, a feeder or root, 335.
Descartes, 29, 129, 147, 276, 277,
292, 377, 613.

a dualist, 277.

his Concursus divinus, 278.

his argument put in modern dress
by Dr. Martineau, 278.
Dhâtupâtha of Pânini, 341.
DHI and DHA, 346, 355, 477-
DHÛ, dhûti, dhûma, 322, 346, 348.
DÎ and DÂ, 355-

Dialectic, more special sense of, 353.
variety, 359.

stage, primitive, 361.

Diamond and combustible, words for,

first framed, 538.

Diderot, 284.

Ding an sich, Kant's, 24, 569.

Diomedes, the grammarian, 189 note.
Distraction and abstraction, 4.

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