Page:Notes and Queries - Series 11 - General Index.djvu/286

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GENERAL INDEX.


- 41 Skillington time," change to "English time,'

  • 1914, x. 188

Skimmity-ride," old Wessex practice, vii. 388 " Skivvy "=a servant, origin of slang word, v. 288, 617

,Skolpyne=a fish. temp. Edward IV., iii. 269, 335

.Skottowe (T.) of South Carolina, his family, x. 389, 452, 609 ; xi. 31, 406 ; his will, 189

Skottowe (T. Britiffe)=Lydia A. Fococke,c. 1784, x. 448

Skottowe (Timothy) of Norwich, 1634, x. 489 ; xi. 16

JSkrine or Skreene (Mrs.), c. 1765, her biography, ii. 389, 475 ; iii. 17

Skull, iron nails driven into, xii. 181, 306, 389, 409, 491

.Skulls, human, as drinking-cups, v. 325

Skye terriers, history of the breed, x. 250, 291

" Skyveyns," meaning of the word, vii. 107, 175

Blade (G/) on William Slade, i. 249

.Slade (William), b. 1698-9, his biography, i. 249
Sladen (Rev. S.) on authors of quotations waited,

iii. 29 ; v. 388 Cromwellian pulpits, iii. 407 Figures rising fom the dead, iii. 407 Ridley (Richard), ix. 390 "Spade Oak" Farm, Bourne End, Bucks, viii. 232 Wesley (Eliza), iv. 608 " Worth " in place-names, i.' 389

.Slang, American : "nixie," " C2K," "husky," x. 329, 471

JSlang, cricket : " googlie," ii, 38; yorker, ii. 505

Slang, South African, ii. 63, 138, 372

' Slang Dictionary,' published c. 1859, x. 488 ; xi. 30, 77, 111, 178

Slang terms derived from gipsy language, iv. 409, 478

Slavery in Scotland in 18th century, ii. 230, 374

Slaves, " English air too pure for," xi. 414

Slaves and the " end of the world," book on, vi. 131

"Slavonian "=a boor, 1613, ix. 288

Slavonic linden folk-lore, i. 365, 437

" Slav scholar," ambiguous phrase, viii. 249, 316, 395

Sleep (Anthony), Suffolk rector, 1618, vi. 450

Sleeper, superstitious objections to waking, xii. 440, 489

Sleepless arch, explanation of the term, ii. 88, 135, 177

  • ' Sleeveless errand," meaning of the phrase, v.

445; vi. 16, 73

Sleuth-Hound on French recruiting before Napo- leon, xi. 189 Heraldic queries, xi. 280 Lyd- gate : reference wanted, xi. 149 Medallic legends, x. 28,48, 68, 89, 109 Origin of quota- tions wanted, xi. 108 ; xii. 28

Sliding, Jonson's use of the word, ii. 174

Slippers : tab slippers or Fenelons, iii. 146

Sloane (Sir Hans), d. 1753, and George Edwards, iv. 190

Slodgers, "fen slodgers," Macaulay on, v. 348, 453

Sloe Fair, Chichester, origin of the name, x. 91, 152, 174, 236

Sloman (Samuel George), d. 1846, his parentage, iii. 108

" Slock," kind of edible seaweed, iv. 469, 532 ; v. 55

Slove-ie hymn, words by S. Jenko, ii. 106

Sma'jpox and the stars, comparison in poem, iii.

Smallpox epitaph, 1758, ii. 624


Smallwell (Edward), Westminster scholar, c. 1700, x. 428

Smart ( G.), tailor, artist in cloth figures, vi. 267, 353

Smart (J. S.) on Milton, viii. 49

Smart (Peter), d. c. 1662 his marriage, xi. 267

Smeaton or Smitton family and the Lords Smea- ton, iii. 209, 316

Smeaton (Lords), and the Smeaton or Smitton family, iii. 209, 316

Smedley (M. B.), her ' Poems written for a Child,' x. 129, 175

Smet (Father de), Jesuit, and the Mormons, 1859, ix. 507

Smith, name in the Vasconcellos family, viii. 510; ix. 96

Smith (Albert), his song on the Great Eastern, 1857, ix. 55

Smith (Albert), entitled to bear arms, vii. 410, 476

Smith (Alexander), his ' Dreamthorp,' ix. 450, 493 ; x. 33, 58, 98

Smith (B.) on toe and finger names, ii. 217

Smith (B. T. K.) on "dope," "to dope," "doper," vii. 134 Earliest work on lawn tennis, 506

Smith (Baker Peter), author, v. 330, 437

Smith (Father Bernard), the organ builder, and Upham, ii. 189, 317, 395, 515

Smith (C. J.) and Thomas Gainsborough, i. 327

Smith (C. Leslie) on Pepys's ' Diary ' Braybrooke edition, v. 6

Smith (Mrs. Charlotte), her novel ' Montalbert,' 1795, ix. 209, 314 ; her poem ' St. Monica,' iii. 228, 298

Smith (Constance) on " Mothering Sunday," ix. 149, 498 Mozart's works, iii. 187

Smith (D.) on "Ihe Noble Boy,' poem, ii. 349

Smith (E.) on Oundle, iii. 131, 298 Tailor and poet, iv. 495 Thatch fires, viii. 76

Smith (E. Tyrrell), actor, c. 1852. his family, xi. 281, 421

Smith (Edward) on derivation of Han well, Middlesex, xii. 377 O'Looney's (Lady) epi- taph : Mrs. Jane Molony, xii. 504 Society for Constitutional Information, xii. 508 Split infi- nitive, xii. 385 Tarpley (Thomas Griffin), xii. 482

Smith (F. Robertson) on Braddock family, viii. 50, 328 ; Richard Henry Wood, F.S.A./x. 171

Smith (Felix), organist, and Louis XVIII. , iv. 349

Smith (G.) on Dr. Thomas Bray, i. 89

Smith (Prof. G. C. Moore) on " alter " in a Latin epitaph, xii. 13 Authors of quotations warn ted, xi. 477 Baron (Robert), author of ' Mirza, a Tragedie,' ix. 1, 22, 43, 61, 206 Beaupius, v. 157 Beausalt, vi. 288 Bcs Brrughton, ii. 286 Bethlem Gabor, vii. 337 Bigod (Isabella), identity of, xii. 16 Brereton's 'Elizabethan Drama,' i. 301 Cambridge : Ely : Hull, vii. 128 Children with same Christian name, i. 79 Clergymen as esquires, iii. 409 Concordances of English authors, x. 513 De Guileville and Bun van, i. 351 Dillon (Charles), portrait of, vii. 469 Famous trial : Jepason, xii. 505 " I are you well, my own Mary Anne," ii. 316 "Fent," iv. 478 "From China to Peru." xi. 6 Gascoigne (George), poet, and his' son William, vi. 305 Gayley's ' Representative English Comedies,' notes on, xii. 113 Gentle- man : armiger : privilegiatus, iii. 231 Gra- tious or Gracines Street, iii. 212 Harvey (Gabriel), his letter- book, iii. 261 ; his mar- ginalia, iii. 409 Hayman (Robert), poet, ii. 270