Page:Notes and Queries - Series 9 - General Index.djvu/212

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204


GENERAL INDEX.


289. Madras, Governor- General of, v. 158. Noye (William), viii. 488. Official lists, vii. 289. Osborn (Lieut.-Col. Henry), xii. 437. Pabeinham (Sir Lawrence), vii. 73. Parliament, Long, three unknown members, x. 383 ; of 1626, xii. 204. Pennington (Sir Isaac), Lord Mayor, viii. 429. Phaer (Thomas), of Cilgerran, x. 98. Pomeroy family of Devon, ix. 14. Privy Council under James I., xii. 367. Prynn (William), ii. 336. Pym (Alexander), vii. 181. Quaker centenarian, viii. 421. Quincentenary of the shrievalty of New- castle, v. 453. Raleigh (Sir Walter), xii. 452. Smith (Sir Nicholas), viii. 373. Smith (Sir Thomas), of Parson's Green, ix. 132. Smith families, i. 352. Strangeways (Sir James), ii. 304. Sturgeon (John), Chamberlain of London, viii. 225. Thompson (John), Secretary of State, vi. 409. Thompsons of York, viii. 68. Thurbane (John), M.P., v. 192. Townshend (Sir John), ii. 409. Venison for the City, iv. 225. Verney (Sir Kichard), viii, 68. Vice- Chancellor, co. Pal. Lancaster, v. 149. Waller (Capt. Henry), viii. 265. Warren (Sir John Borlase), vii. 92. Weld (Sir John), v. 298, 458. Welde (William de), ii. 446. West (Edmund), M.P., vi. 388. Wright (Sir Edmund), Lord Mayor, iv. 335

Pinna, beard of the, and silk manufacture, vii. 428

Pinner, Middlesex, its name, ii. 366

Pinpricks, political use of the word in 1777, vi. 188 ; the policy of, xii. 15, 295

Pins and pincushions, ix. 209, 333, 455

Pins in drinking vessels, iv. 287, 358, 484 ; ix. 10, 136, 255, 293, 396

Pinsenall, meaning of the word, xi. 287

Pint umbit " in Edwards's Shaksper, not Shake- speare,' its meaning, vii. 489 ; viii. 135

Piozzi (Mrs. H. L.) and Dr. Whalley, i. 211

Pip, use of the word, xi. 366

" Pip in the webe," its meaning, iii. 49, 115

Piper (W. G.) on counter-jumpers, xii. 228

Pipes, Winchester, v. 516 ; vi. 74

Piquet, poem on, x. 467

Pirogue, its etymology, viii. 322

Pisa, Byron and Shelley in, i. 142

Pitched battle, definition, vi. 286, 497

Pitcher, its etymology, viii. 160

Pitcher (D.) on Delaval family, v. 55

Pitcher of water in death chamber, vii. G9

Pitchers, wooden, at Grenoble, v. 154

Pitches (Sir Abraham), of Streatham, Surrey, v. 314 ; vi. 15, 177

Pitman (Frederick Cobbe), his biography, vi. 470

Pitman (H. A.) on Robert and Henry Delaval, iv. 417. Pitman (F. C.), vi. 470

Pitt (W.), Lord Chatham on popular oratory, ii. 529 ; ' Letter on Superstition,' xi. 88

Pitt portraits, sale of, iv. 346

Pixy on Stanbury of Devon and Cornwall, vii. 473

Pize, etymology of the word, vii. 187

" Place," used for name of house, x. 448 ; xi. 157, 237

Place-name, formation of a, vii. 105 Place-names, temp. Edward I. and Richard II., i. 107, 191, 275 ; singular, iii. 105, 177, 332, 391 ; Roumanian, v. 311 j meaning of Cornish, vii. 488 ; explanation of, x. 188, 249


Plack, Scotch coin, ii. 348, 529

Plackett (Jack) and his Common, ii. 508 ; iii. 423, 491 ; iv. 58, 138

Plagiarism and platitude, xi. 425

Plagiary, a seventeenth-century, viii. 457; ix. 112, 333

Plague, Great, 1665, notes from bills of mortality, iii. 266

Plaistow, Edmund Burke's residence at, 1759-61, xi. 427

Planche" (J. R.), his burlesque of Aristophanes' ' Birds,' iv. 204, 296, 357, 502

Plant name, Kentish, v. 376, 440

Plant names, obsolete, i. 29, 272

Plantagenet on Halliday family, iii. 207. English coinage, its origin, iv. 504. Medal, i. 67. Reade family, v. 175

Plantagenet (Arthur), Viscount L'Isle, his retinue, v. 269, 383

Plantagenet (Margaret), Countess of Salisbury, her portrait, ii. 468, 516 ; iii. 33

Plantagenet chair in York Minster, vi. 150, 233, 294, 333

Plashed hedges, their origin, v. 127, 235, 325

Plassey and Biderra, accounts of the battles, v. 55

Plaster quotation, 1591, xi. 488

Plate, French pewter, vi. 347

Platform, earliest political use of the word, v. 395

Platitude and plagiarism, xi. 425

Platt (J.), Jun., on accent, ii. 61. Accorder, xii. 137. Adrop, alchemical term, iii. 386. African names, i. 466; ii. 96, 310; iv. 519; v. 113. Aix-la- Chapelle, ix. 467. Anglo-Hebrew slang : kybosh, vii. 276. Annotto, iv. 125. Atlas wanted, xi. 16. Azra legend, iii. 375 ; xi. 317. Banquo, xi. 131. Benicke, a ghost-word, iii. 205. Bezique, xi. 26. Bletheramskite, xii. 154. Boadicea or Boudicca (Queen), i. 94 ; x. 64, 177. Borrow's 'Romany Rye,' viii. 488. Boxers, v. 512. Browningiana, i. 366. " Cards and spades," xii. 138. Caribou, ix. 465. Carlow surname, iii. 228. Cedilla, its omission, viii. 262. Cetinje, origin of the name, iii. 167. Cetywayo, iii. 406. Chacma, zoological term, v. 394. Chicago, its etymology, x. 346. Chimpanzee, its definition, viii. 341. China (Empress of), vi. 167. Chinese ghosts, xii. 305. Chinese in London,[vi. 42. Cocco : Eddoes, vi. 187. Coonda-oil: kunda-oil, viii. 442. Craw-craw, its etymology, vii. 347. Cross vice kris, ii. 36. Danish pronunciation, ii. 415. Dickens's opium den, ix. 361. Dual number in provincial German, vii. 517. " Elixir Vitae " in fiction, iv. 257. Eng- lish accentuation, xii. 475. Eo, vowel combina- tion, i. 305. Foreigners in Mexico, their designation, vii. 496. French proper names, iv. 6. French village names, ii. 208. Friesic proverb, vi. 452. Gardafui, Cape, xi. 496. Gaucho, vii. 86. Gipsies of Spain, vi. 309. Gnu, its etymology, v. 45. Gonoph and Gonivah, iii. 426. Goober and pindar, botanical terms, v. 413. Gourou nut, ix. 106. Gum elemi, vi. 126. Hago, its meaning, vii. 478. Half-bull = half-crown, xi. 71. -Halgh, the termina- tion, i. 345. Hamburg, xii. 334. Hamish as a Christian name, i. 437. Hebrew incantations, x. 78. Hernsew, its etymology, i. 354. Hicatee, its