[ 4Q6 ] 
P. B. M. F. V. 
s: Z. R. Sh. Zh. 
T. D. L. Th. Dh. 
K. G. N. Ch. J. 
wherein their mutual Analogy and Correfpondencc 
feems to appear in the plain eft Light that one can 
poflibly put them in ; as a little Attention will bet- 
ter difeover, than a Prolixity of Particulars explain. 
If not, I fhall be glad to be fet right, if I am 
miftaken in fuppofing, i. That here is no Confonant 
omitted, which is really ufed in our common Pro- 
nunciation; or, 2. That here are none fuperfluous, 
or compounded 5 or, 3. That, in this View of them, 
their Relation to each other is the 1110ft difcernible. 
I except the Letter H, which may have its Place 
amongft the guttural confonantal Alpirates, which 
fome foreign Nations are accuftomed to, but ours, 
in general, is not: And thefe, as I conceive, will 
not be found to be diftindly more than what the 
Addition of a fifth Rank to the foregoing may ex- 
hauft. 
The Power or Force of this peculiar Letter h is fo ca- 
pable of Intermixture with that of others in this Table, 
and that of the Nafo-guttural N, of Aiding, without its 
full Exprellion, into a following Confonant (as it does 
particularly in French Pronunciation), that they haye 
led the Writers on this Subjed to imagine Confo- 
nants in Nature, which they endeavour to exprefs 
by N French , gn> ng, and by divers Changes of 
the Letters h } n, g, that give an attentive Examiner 
no clear Idea of any diftind Confonant, but rather 
perplex 
