444 



INDEX. 



articulation by, 128 ; Indian sign for 

 barking, 146 ; recognizing pictorial re- 

 presentations, 188 ; practising conceal- 

 ment and hypocrisy, 198 ; ejective 

 ideation of, 198 ; receptual self-con- 

 sciousness of, 199; counting by, 215; 

 begging before a bitch, 221 ; deaf- 

 mute's articulate name of, 367 



Donaldson on demonstrative elements, 

 244 



Dublin Review on psychology of judg- 

 ment, 166, 167 



Dumas, Alex., on sign-making, ill 



Du Ponceau on language of savages, 

 349, 351 



E 



Ecitons. See Ants 



Eg}'ptian language. See Language 



Elephant, intelligence of, 98 



Ellis on early English pronunciation, 373 



Emerson on fundamental metaphor, 344 



Emotions of man and brutes compared, 7 



Empty words, 246 



Encyclopcedia Britannica (i857)> o^^ the 



origin of speech, 240 

 English language. See Language 

 Etruscan language. See Language 



Farrar, Archdeacon, on demonstrative 

 elements, 244 ; on invention of lan- 

 guages by children, 263 ; on roots of 

 language, 268, 358 ; on origin of the 

 verb, 275 ; on paucity of words in 

 vocabulary of English labourers, 280 ; 

 on onomatopoeia, 284-288, 290 ; on 

 objective phraseology of young children 

 and early man, 301 ; on the substan- 

 tive verb, 309 ; on fundamental meta- 

 phor, 344; on language of savages in 

 respect of abstraction, 350 ; on absence 

 of subjective personal pronouns in 

 early forms of speech, 421 



Feejee language. See Language 



Fire only made by man, 19 



Fitzgerald, P. F., on self-consciousness, 



212 

 Flight, capability of, in insects, reptiles, 



birds, and mammals, 156, 157 

 Forbes, James, on intelligence of monkeys, 



100 

 Fox, intelligence of, 55, 56 

 Frogs, understanding by, of tones of 



human voice, 124 



Galton, Francis, on ideas as generic 

 images, 23 ; on relation of thought to 

 speech, 83 ; on intelligence of Dam- 

 maras, 215 



Garnett, on nature and analysis of the 

 verb, 275, 307, 309-312 ; on sentence- 

 words, 300 ; on primitive forms of 

 predication, 318 ; on fundamental meta- 

 phor, 344, 358 ; on absence of subjec- 

 tive cases of pronouns in early forms of 

 speech, 421 



Geiger, on ideas, 45 ; on dependence of 

 thought upon language, 83 ; on under- 

 standing of words by brutes, 127; on 

 roots of language, 268, 273, 336 ; on 

 distinction between ideas as general 

 and generic, 279 ; on increasing con- 

 ceptuality of terms with increase of 

 culture, 280 ; on the impossibility of 

 language having ever consisted exclu- 

 sively of general terms, 282 ; on Pleyse's 

 theory of the origin of speech, 289 ; on 

 onomatopoeia, 292 ; on the vanishing 

 point of language, 314, 354; on funda- 

 mental metaphor as illustrated by 

 names of tools, 345, 346, and words of 

 moral significance, 346, 347 ; on the 

 sense of sight in relation to the origin of 

 speech, 366, 367 ; on Homo alalus, 380 



General ideas. See Ideas 



Generalization. See Ideas 



Generic ideas. See Recepts 



Genitive case, philology of, 305, 385 



Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, Isid., on a mon- 

 key recognizing pictorial representa- 

 I tions, 188 



