Ixxxiv INTRODUCTION. 



©eri'tfi; but perhaps this opinion may be not 

 quite unbiassed, as it forms part of his advo- 

 cacy of Ulme as an original German word. 

 This -der figures in some of our place- 

 names, as, Appledore, Maple Durham (ma- 

 pulder ham), Powderham (apulder ham). 



hune. It stands alone, as, ' Marrublura hune ' 

 and also in composition : — harehune (hore- 

 hound). 



-laSe (-IsetSe) : — attor, sattor (1). It answers 

 to the Latin termination -fuga, as, ' Feni- 

 fuea [=venenifuga] Attor-lathe.' Durh. 



-leae (-lee) : — crawan, crop, enne^ fujeles, gar, 

 hoi, hrefnes, hwit, por, yne. 



-leaf : — api^el leaf (violet). 



-loppe : — cuslojype. 



-m.oru:—/ehl 7noru (carrot), weal moru (par- 

 sni]^). The carrot is in German mo()vc, in 

 0. H. German moralia, and Fuchs tells us 

 the druggists called it 3)iore. In Russian it 

 is niorkovi, Lit. morha, morkva (Pictet), 

 and Grassmann adds Old Indian milia root, 

 with a diminutive millaka : so that here wc 

 seem to have a very old word for Root, 

 which has become special for the most con- 

 spicuous tap-roots. There is AVclsh moron 

 (pi.) for tap-roots, comprising carrot, par- 

 snip, radish. In Dcvonshii-e I remember 

 when more (pronounced broadly mawer) was 



