Page:Notes and Queries - Series 10 - General Index.djvu/281

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

TENTH SERIES.


273


Moon, new : fortunate or unfortunate, v. 252. November 5, x. 434. Pig : swine : hog, iv. 449. Pour, v. 329. Refrains, two popular, viii. 435. Rise, active verb, ix. 427. Rush- lights, x. 93, 135. Sardana, viii. 56. Sex before birth, ii. 235. " Spanish Strapps " : " Morbus Gallicus," xi. 116. Special constables, vi. 418. Spellicans, ix. 16. Spelling changes, vi. 450. Suicides buried in open fields, iv. 514. Tarot cards, v. 452. Twins, iii. 318. Webster (Daniel), ii. 472. Wheel as symbol of religion, iv. 250. Wine used at Holy Com- munion, ix. 213

Street cries in 1696, vi. 434

Street names, London, iii. 181, 254 ; xi. 229 ; hyphens after, iv. 449, 515 ; transferred, vi. 36

Streets, London, origin of some, ix. 147

Streets, vanished and vanishing, v. 81, 136, 175, 221

' Streets of London,' lines in the play, iii. 428, 476

' Streets of London ' and ' Lights of London,' iv. 50

Stretton (Mrs. J. C. ), author of ' The Valley of a Hundred Fires,' viii. 149, 253, 313 ; ix. 54, 111

Strickland (W. W.) on Gipsies : Chigunnji, ii. 105

Stringer (C.) on Ainsworth and Thames Darrell, viii. 189

Stripping cows, phrase explained, xii. 409, 476

Stroaker-out, ghost-word, viii. 280

Strode (William), d. 1645, science anticipated in his ' Floating Island,' vi. 304

Strode (William), his Regiment of Foot, 1760, vi. 70, 112 ; xii. 210, 256

Stronach (G.) on Bacon and the drama, ii. 331. Bacon or Usher ? iii. 94, 316. Bacon's Apophthegms, viii. 78. Byron's ' Don Juan,' vi. 369. Elliot (Sir Gilbert), ii. 48. Jonson (Ben) and Bacon, iii. 94. " New facts regarding Shakespeare," i. 45. Shakespeare's scholar- ship, i. 33. Shakespeare's wife, ii. 389

Strong (Edward), Capt. Nares, and St. Paul's, xii. 365

Strong (Prof. H. A.) on Algarva, iii. 194. " An old woman went to market," iii. 10. Bacteria : early notice, v. 45. Beeswaxers, xi. 187. Brumby, yi. 470. Chaperoned, i. 92. Devon provincialisms, vi. 33. Dickens queries, i. 272. Economy, i. 38. Epitaph, ii. 13. French words of uncertain origin, iii. 222, 445. Goyle, iii. 475. ' He who knows not," i. 235. Latin lines, i. 314, 353. Latin pronunciation, vii. 108. Morale, i. 237. Most eloquent of ancient writers, iv. 393. Ossian, vi. 336. Palindrome, iii. 375. Prescriptions, ii. 356. Resp., iv. 50. 8anguis, its derivation, i. 515. Shakespeariana, iii. 184. Sothern's London residence, iii. 111. Stymie at golf, ix. 492. Virgil or Vergil ? iv. 309. Vixens and drunkenness, iii. 437 .'Strong (Hugh W.) on tackle-house, xii. 351 Strong (Col. O. H.) on regimental marches, x. 352.

Regiments at Boomplatz, ii. 251 Strugiiell surname, xi. 109 Struthius (Josephus), his 'Doctrine of Pulses,' ii.

108, 151

Strzygowski, pronunciation of his name, viii. 310 Stuart (Queen Mary) in Grant's ' Bothwell,' vi. 267.

See Mary, Queen of Scots.

Stuart, Earl of Traquair, his wives, xi. 170, 396 Stuart (Andrew), ' Letters on the Douglas Cause,'

iv. 85

Stuart (Arabella) and Highgate, x. 46, 93, 156 Stuart (Daniel and Peter), newspaper proprietors, iv. 125


Stuart (James), Old Pretender, his lying in state, ii. 48

Stuart (Jane), Quaker princess buried at W r isbech, ii. 208, 294

Stuart (Lieut. -General Sir John), victor of Maida, i. 175 ; xi. 329

Stuart and Romanoff pedigree, iv. 108, 157, 197, 295

Stuart Kings, Court posts under, i. 107, 173, 198

Stuarts, their heiress, ii. 400

Stubbin (Commissary) and Landguard Fort, ix. 230

Stubbs or Stubbes (George), poet, and Dodsley, ix. 250 ; his biography, xii. 304

Stubbs (H.) on Archdeacon Philip Stubbs, xi. 49. Stubbs (Philip), xi. 33

Stubbs (J.), c. 1785, his marriages and descendants, v. 329

Stubbs (P.), author of ' Anatomy of Abuses,' x. 308 ; xi. 33

Stubbs (Archdeacon Philip), 1665-1738, portrait of, xi. 49

Stubbs (Robert) of Stamford, his biography, ix. 250

Stubbs (Sir T. W.), his biography, ii. 189 ; iii. 98

Student on final e in Chaucer, iv. 429 ; v. 36

Stukeley (Sir Lewis), his ' Petition,' 1618, iii. 428

Stukeley (Capt. Thomas), hero of old play, iii. 301, 342, 382

Stukeley family, xi. 487

Stumpy and Rowdy, origin of the names, x. 287

Sturges (A. J.) on ' Intellect and Valour of Great Britain,' x. 129 .

Sturmy or Esturmy family, vii. 209, 312 ; viii. 16, 73

Stuteville (Joan) and ladies riding sideways, viii. 168

Stutt family, iii. 448

Style, Old and New, ii. 128, 177, 266 ; xii. 473

Style, Townsend, and Rokewood families, v. 488

Stymie at golf, etymology of the word, ix. 370, 414, 492 ; x. 15, 112, 192

Submarines, torpedoes, and rifled cannon in Napoleon's time, iii. 89, 111

Subsidy Rolls, Tudor, vii. 68

Subterraneous Exhibition, Strand, c. 1843, viii. 86, 174

Suck-bottle : feeding-bottle, the words, viii. 190. 256, 355

Suckets : sunkets, origin of the words, xii. 443

Suckling (Mrs. F. H.) on Thomas Bainbridge, xi. 69. Cold Harbour Lane, ix. 68. Court Leet, viii. 413. Cresset stones, vi. 155. Eliza- beth of Bohemia, xii. 292. Funeral garlands, vi. 155. Gatehouse and Rumbold families, ix. 351. Giffords of King Somborne, Hamp- shire, viii. 489. Goldsmid (Sir Isaac), xi. 89. Henley (George), ix. 141 ; x. 192. Holden family, vii. 233. " Idle Dick Norton," vii. 168, 416. Lame-dog poem, vii. 89. Luther pictures, x. 350. Norman Court, Hampshire, viii. 345. Palmerston and the poacher, vi. 141. Pightle : pikle, v. 470. St. Edith, vi. 29, 91, 513

Suckling (Sir John), use of the word pallat, vii. 247, 414 ; and Ben Jonson, xii. 345

Sudlow (H. E.) on Sudlow family, viii. 310

Sudlow family, viii. 310, 476

Suetonius and Swift, literary parallel, x. 365

Suffolk (Duke of), 1450, and Duchess of Gloucester, i. 209

Suffolk (Henry Grey, Duke of), his remains, i. 47

Suffolk (Glanville, Earl of), v. 213