Page:Notes and Queries - Series 9 - General Index.djvu/141

This page needs to be proofread.

NINTH SERIES.


133


Honorificabilitudinitatibus, i. 28

Honour refused, instance of, viii. 401

Honourable, as a Scotch title, ii. 227, 292 ; use of the

title after ordination, xii. 77 Hoo: She, Hi. 245, 418

Hood (Robin) in French folk-lore, xi. 169, 258, 410 Hood (Robin) literature, viii. 263 Hood's (Robin) Mill, Giggleswick, xii. 309 Hood (Thomas), his ' Last Man,' iv. 534 ; his ' Comic Annual,' 1830-40, ix. 188, 336 ; x. 74 ; his Christian name, xi. 306

Hoodock, its etymology, iv. 517; v. 35, 113, 258 Hoods as headdresses, i. 174 ; academic, iv. 329 Hook (Theodore), and Thos. Earnshaw, iii. 446, 494 ;

and 'John Bull,' vi. 116, 157, 255, 353 Hook it, origin of the phrase, xii. 33, 156; xi. 348 Hook of Holland = Hoek van Holland, i. 387 Hooker (Rev. Richard), d. 1600, his widow, viii. 522 Hookey (R. J.) on inscription in Mull, vi. 393 Hooligan^ street ruffian, ii. 227, 316 ; vii. 48, 114 "Hoon aff," to hold off or delay, iv. 517; v. 56 Hooper (Daniel), of Barbadoes, i. 188, 271, 377 Hooper (J.) on Agnes a fateful name, iii. 249. Anchoress in the land of Leodium, ix. 429. Anonymous poets, iv. 498. A nti- Jewish survival, in Barcelona, v. 315. "Ass bearing books," iv. 397, 483. Avis, the Order of, v. 457. Aylmer arms, xii. 448. Bagatelle, its etymology, iii. 345. Battle sheaves, v. 230. Bible, xii. 148. Bigot: Bigote, its derivation, v. 125. Bilingual wills, Latin and English, ix. 407. Boudicca repulsed at Verulam, iv. 457. " Box Harry," x. 98. Bryce (Thomas), bis riming ' Register,' v. 357. " Buried for truth," i. 487. Chal, Romany, iii. 373. Christ's half dole, i. 349. Churches, double-naved, iii. 429. " Colley Thumper," i. 145. Collins (Wilkie), i. 41 8. Crony, xi. 507. Crying down credit, xii. 352. Culamite=: Dissenter, ii. 313. Donne (Dean), and the Donnes of Norfolk, xii. 24. Dozzil or dossil, v. 178. Dunces of Norfolk, xii. 309. Edward VII., rime on, viii. 445. Elizabeth and New Hall, Essex, xii. 208, 496. Fairies, green: Woolpit green children, v. 47. Fey=to cleanse, iv. 194. "Flea in the ear," xii. 138. Friars, orders of, i. 472. Ghetto, its derivation, viii. 186. Glass fracture, i. 14. Harry-carry, or trolly-cart, i. 429. Hele : to Hele, iv. 93. Hoods as headdresses, i. 174. Humpbacks touched for luck, iii. 486. Inch- bald (Joseph), vi. 150. Irish " Glibbes " or "Coulins," iii. 449. " Jack among the maidens," viii. 165. " Jesus' Tree," ii. 348. Jews, black, iv. 68 ; and eternal punishment, x. 229. Jonkanoo : John Canoe, i. 426. Kazar, Kingdom of, vi. 8. Kinnui : Jewish eke-names, v. 5. Kissed for luck, iv. 148. Lavinia, origin of the name, iii. 273. ' Lazy Laurence," v, 503. Licensed house, oldest in England, viii. 44. Lily of Wales, i. 504. Log- gerheads and Llanberris, iii. 68. Lollard towers, v. 496. Lope de Vega, xii. 287. Loriot, green woodpecker, vi. 149. Lushington, xii. 76. Marquee, date of the word, v. 77- Marriage and baptism superstitions, iv. 518. Massena (Marshal), iii. 357. Midwives' epitaphs in Norwich, v. 453. Mihell or Michel (Henry), vi. 28. Minute-men, iv. 7. Mottoes, xii. 7. Mustard motto, iii. 88. News-


paper, first halfpenny, iv. 357. Nicholas of Lynn, iv. 35. Nicholas of Lynn and Nicolaus de Lyra, xii. 107. Nicodemus's seat, iv. 128. Nizolian paper books, iii. 487. Obi : Obeah, iv. 96. Para- dise, use of the word, vi. 207. Pay, its East Anglian pronunciation, i. 132. Peas, pease, and peasen, iii. 25. " Pickled rope," iv. 479. Pick- some, its meaning, i. 497. Pig-a-back, ii. 429. Pilekoc, its meaning, vi. 250. Pleasure, its defini- tion, xii. 346. Popes, newly elected, ii. 388. Portland vase, viii. 472. Potatoes, whisky, and leprosy, xi. 428. Q. (Mrs.), her biography, iv. 28. Religion, a definition, vi. 308. Remarkable coinci- dence, x. 88. "Rest, but do not loiter," i. 38. Rotten Row, i. 217. St. Jordan, Christian name, v. 256. St. Julian's Horn, i. 506. St. Valentine and Crisman, ii. 187. St. Werner, ii. 8. Scrimanski, in 'Hudibras,' iii. 358. Sex, third, ii. 366. Shadwell (John), father of Thomas Shad- well, v. 515. Shields, derivation of the place- name, ix. 384. Shoemakers lady, v. 87. Skottowe (Augustine), i. 28. " Soam of hay," iv. 208. Spalt, its meaning, i. 473. Spenser (Edmund), his Rosa- lind, iv. 44. Sunday morning service, its hour, x. 213. Sybrit and banns in Latin, i. 144. Tash- lich, Jewish custom, vi. 128. " Three acres and a cow," viii. 14. Trunched, its meaning, i. 252. Virgin of Bressau, ii. 167. Voltaire engraving, iv. 328. Wallington (Nehemiah), v. 187. "Wigs on the green," iii. 492. Writing lessons on sand, x. 64. Zephyr, its meanings, i. 452

Hooper (John), Bishop of Gloucester, his vestments, iii. 209, 456

Hooper (J. S. M.) on brasses in Kirkleatham Church, x. 305

Hooper (R. H.) on Maori legend, xi. 369

Hope (A.) on heartsease, ix. 392

Hope (H. G.) on "Adelphi dramas": "Adelphi guest," vi. 314. Army Lists, 1642 to 1898, i. 406. Arnold of Rugby, vi. 446. Bletheramskite, xi. 335. Bonaparte broadside, iii. 392. Bonaparte relic, iii. 3. Boon for bookworms, x. 98. Britannia Theatre, Hoxton, xi. 477. "Broaching the ad- miral," i. 350. Browne (Sir Thomas), xi. 12. " Buchanan (Geordie), Under the beard of," iii. 433. Canning (Hon. George), i. 17. ' Caste,' pro- totypes of the characters, x. 108. 'Complete Angler,' vi. 249. Curran (J. P.) and Robespierre, i. 183, 438. Curran (Sarah), iii. 472. " Cutting his stick," iii. 272. Dante portrait, xi. 510. Danteiana, vii. 316. Defoe (Daniel), v. 483; vi. 156, 219. " Dewy-feathered," ii. 176. Dispatches to the War Office, confidential, vii. 378. Dog which followed Due d'Enghien, xii. 92, 174. Donne (Dean) and the Donnes of Norfolk, xii. 131. Dublin, play at, iv. 90. Dublin booksellers, viii. 184, 428. Duels, ix. 94. Envelopes, xii. 397. Family likeness, viii. 369. Fashion in language, xi. 156. Fashionable slang of the past, x. 98. FitzGerald (E.), his Omar Khayy&m,' iii. 326. Fontenoy, battle of, vii. 25, 211. Forage caps, viii. 361. Foreigners in Mexico, viii. 210. ' Gentleman's Magazine,' iii. 144. Ghetto, Roman, iii. 155. Gladstone, and anonymous letters, ii. 87 ; on Shakspeare, iii. 26. Green and the Grahams, iii. 94. Green table, i. 156. Hawk wood