INDEX. 



445 



Geology, imperfect record of, 19 



Gesture. See Language 



Gibbon. See Apes 



Goethe on obliteration of original mean- 

 ings of words, 284 



Goodbehere, S., on sign-making by a 

 pony, 97 



Gorilla. See Apes 



Greek. See Language 



Green, Professor, on self-consciousness, 

 212 



Grimace. See Language 



Grimm, on the origin of speech, 240 ; 

 on names for thunder, 2S6 ; on funda- 

 mental metaphor, 344 



H 



Haeckel, Professor, on Homo alalus, 370, 

 380 ; on sounds made by apes, 374 



Hague on sign-making by ants, 93, 94 



Hale, Dr. H., on spontaneous invention 

 of words by children, 138-144; on the 

 origin of languages, 259-263 



Hamilton, Sir William, on ideas as 

 abstract and general, 24, 25, 79, 80 



Harper, F., on Greek tenses, 301 



Haughton, Sir Graves, on roots of lan- 

 guages, 275 



Hebrew. See Language 



Hegel, on absence in brutes of the idea 

 of causality, 58 ; on self-consciousness, 

 212 



Heinieke on words spontaneously in- 

 vented by deaf-mutes, 367 



Hen, different tones used by, as signs to 

 chickens, &c., 96 



Herder, on the origin of speech, 240 ; on 

 the original concretism of language, 359 



Herzen on self-consciousness, 212 



Heyse, on onomatopoeia, 285, 287 ; on 

 the origin of speech, 289 ; on funda- 

 mental metaphor, 344 ; on poverty of 

 savnge languages in abstract terms, 351 



Hobbes on the copula, 172, 173 



Hogg on a dog understanding word<:, 125 



Holden on the vocabularies of children, 

 372, 373 



Homo, See Man 



Horace on the origin of speech, 240 



Horse, sign-making by, 97 



Hoste, Sir W., on intelligence of mon- 

 keys, lOI 



Hottentots, language of, 291, 373, 374 



Ilouzeau, on dogs seeking water in 

 hollows, 51 ; on tones used by the 

 common hen as signs, 96 ; on talking 

 birds, 129, 130; on danger signals of 

 birds, 369 



Hovelacque, on demonstrative elements, 

 244 ; on auxiliary words, 247 ; on 

 formulae of language-structure, 248 ; 

 on affinities of languages, 250, 255 ; 

 on limitations of consonantal sounds 

 in various languages, 373 



Huber on sign-making by insects, 88-90 



Human. See Man 



Humboldt on the origin of speech, 240 



Hun, Dr. E. R., on spontaneous inven- 

 tion of words by young children, 

 140-143 



Hungarian language. See Language 



Huxley, Professor, on importance of the 

 evolution theory in relation to anthro- 

 pology, 2, 3 ; on animal automatism, 

 II ; on the brain-weight of man as 

 compared with that of anthropoid 

 apes, 16 ; on ideas, 23, 43 ; on import- 

 ance of language to development of 

 human thought, 134 ; on smallness of 

 anatomical difference which deter- 

 mines or prevents power of articulation, 

 I53» 370> 371 ; on psychology of judg- 

 ment, 164 ; on erect attitude assumed 

 by gibbon and gorilla, 381, 382 



Icelandic language. See Language 

 Ideas, definition and classification of, 

 20-39 ; as recepts, chap. iii. ; as con- 

 cepts, chap. iv. ; as general and 

 generic, 38, 39, 68, 69, 276-281, 336, 

 337 ; as abstract, 20-39, 70-80 ; of 

 causation in brutes, 58-60, and in 

 man, 210; of uneducated deaf-mutes, 



