NINTH SERIES.
139
Inam or ImAm, Arabic word, vii. 345
Incantations, Hebrew, x. 29, 78, 158, 355
Incarnation, era in monkish chronology, i. 10, 92, 231 ;
ii. 29, 292, 473 ; iii. 73, 234 Ince (Samuel), his biography, viii. 505 Inchbald (Joseph), his biography, vi. 151, 235 Incus on Alton Towers sale, i. 468 Inde-baudias, its meaning and origin, iv. 147, 216,
485 Independent Company of Invalids, vi. 429, 493 ; vii.
171 Index, its definition, iii. 444 ; form of compilation, iv.
12 ; Index Expurgatorius and Galileo's works, viii.
342, 414 Index to the ' Dictionary of National Biography,' viii.
Index to ' Notes and Queries,' for sale, v. 413, 514 ; vii. 26, 387, 520 ; ix. 300 ; corrections in General Indexes, vii. 43, 164
Indexes, consolidated genealogical, vii. 426 ; eigh- teenth century, x. 109, 178
Indexing queries, i. 45, 237, 474
Index-making, iv. 12 ; ix. 348, 485 ; x. 194, 272, 425 ; xi. 14
India, the title Kaisar-i-Hind, iii. 283 ; superstitions relating to animals in, vii. 225; regiment that declined to go to, vii. 329 ; Eleanor and Emily Eden on travels in, ix. 307 ; overland journey to, and Mrs. Col. Ellwood, 428 ; biographical sketches of princes of, xi. 21
India on Indian magic, i. 88
India Office records, vi. 287
Indian magic, i. 88, 153
Indian Mutiny, and Nana Sahib, x. 170 ; and the ' Athenaeum,' xi. 65
Indian nobleman, iii. 6
Indiana on authors of quotations wanted, xii. 188
Indians (North American), their name system, iii. 44o
Indicible, recent use of the word, v. 477
Indigo, use of the word by Dante, xi. 184, 338
Indispensable = reticule, iv. 247, 310
Industries, declining English, i. 105
Ineen Dubh, reference to,.xi. 509 ; xii. 75
Infant's Library, date of publication, iv. 129, 216, 250
Infantry, mounted, in early times, v. 146, 345
Infinitive, the split, ix. 172
Influenza, early reference to, vii. 286
Information and General Knowledge Office, iii. 327,
" Infra dig.," its origin, iv. 417
Ingate, its meaning, iv. 437, 488
Ingelow (Jean), novel by, i. 14, 498 ; lines by, v. 229
Ingeminate, use and meaning of the word, xii. 49,
135
Ingland and Inglish, use of the words in!810,xii. 448 Ingleby (H.) on chink of woods, v. 432. Cricket, laws of, v. 382. Florin = Scotchman, v. 413. House, inverted, v. 495. Hurry =staitb, v. 217. Inundate, its pronunciation, v. 497 ; vi. 192 "La-di-da," name of song, vii. 425. Manurance, vii. 125, 336. "Nothing like leather," vi. 426. Paper, loaded, vi. 386. Parliament cake, iii. 149. 'Punch,' changes in, v. 291. Royal Navy Club, ii. 411. Several, uses of the word, v. 412.
Shakespeare's prose, v. 311. Shakespeare's Sonnets,
xii. 210. Shakespeariana, vii. 22. Smous, its
meaning, vii. 298. Stamp collecting, v. 501.
'Tom Bowling,' vi. 15. Waterloo engravings, ix.
107. Woad, its definition, v. 246
Inglis (Charles) and Thomas Paine, i. 465
Inglis (C. D.) on Anne of Austria ; Herve', artist ; Henry VIII. and Cromwell, vi. 209
Inglis MSS. at Oxford, description of the, ix. 347 430
Ingram (B. S.) on artists' mistakes, ix. 372
Ingram (J. H.) on book-titles changed, ix. 432. Darley, a forgotten Irish poet, ix. 474
-Ington, termination of names, iii. 208, 313, 376
Initial for forename in serious verse, iv. 184 ; ix. 227 ; x. 238
Ink, cake, earliest quotation for, v. 475
Ink in 1288, price of, viii. 14
Inkbottles and evil spirits, xii. 106, 297
Inkhorns, fountain, ii. 228, 532
Inkhorns and ink-glasses, iv. 166
Inkle = tape, its etymology, v. 167
Inland Revenue, sale of stamps forbidden by the, ix. 288
Inman (C.) on King of Jerusalem, iii. 388. Sepoy Mutiny, i. 313
Inn, old English, iii. 326, 494
Inn of Bishop of Norwich in Fetter Lane, its exact site, vi. 289
Inn rimes, curious, iv. 225
Inn signs painted by celebrated artists, xi. 89, 317
Innes on D'Auvergne family, vii. 68
Innes=de Insula, iii. 188, 335
Inns, noblemen's, in town, i. 327, 412 ; ii. 516
Inns of Chancery, records of London, 1639-42, xi. 448 ; xii. 13
Inns of Court, age of entry at, vi. 107, 195, 278, B33 ; vii. 17, 452
Inoculation, early, vii. 108, 212
Inq. on JBolian harp, x. 448. Flint buildings, xii. 828. Mark on the spine of Chinese children, v. 209
Inquests in olden times, reports of coroners', ix. 408, 475, 519
Inquirer on "By gar," x. 348. Chalmers (G.), por- trait painter, x. 227. Dictionary of English pro- verbs, i. 487. Elizabethan portrait, xi. 149. Esquire, the title, vii. 236. Eyre (Sir Giles), i. 47. Forty pounds a year in Goldsmith's day, xi. 289. Hubbell arms, xi. 228. Hongkong and Kiao-Chou, i. 348. Mixed marriages, x. 447. Muhammed or Mo- hammed ? xi. 509. Pekin and Nankin, i. 448. Phillip (Capt. Arthur), ii. 46. Pope, passage in, vii. 308. Portraits wanted, ix. 368. Scrope (Adrian), the regicide, v. 495. Volant as a Christian name, v. 229
Inquisition, records at Trinity College, Dublin, i. 509; in Spain and Portugal, vi. 210, 357
[nsanity and genius, their kinship, ix. 269, 430
Inscription, fireplace, i. 69, 273 ; puzzling, ii. 347 ; Runic, found in St. Paul's Churchyard, vii. 269, 338 ; in the metaphysics class-room in Edinburgh University, 485 ; on snuff-box, xii. 429, 495 ; on house in Wymondham, xii. 475
[inscriptions, on statues, v. 168; in Brightwell Church, 168, 275 ; in St. Margaret's Westminster, v. 204 ; vi. 1, 63, 101 ; ix. 181, 242, 303, 382, 463 ; xii. 1,