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in which the author introduces himself, assumes a confidential tone, and suggests that etymology and entomology are different sciences, or |
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1 | (6) |
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in which another important distinction, this time between words and things, is made, or |
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7 | (8) |
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which descends from philosophical heights to cooing doves and mooing cows and explains in passing that sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander and that boys will be boys, or |
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15 | (13) |
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which makes sense because it is sound. Mooing cows and cooing doves give way to sleazy politicians, but they unite later to produce a coherent theory of word formation, or |
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28 | (16) |
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in which people take the cause of word origins in hand, or |
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44 | (10) |
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in which words dilly-dally, shilly-shally, and play tick-tack-toe in disregard of the hubbub they produce, or |
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Words Based on Reduplication |
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54 | (10) |
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which extols swelling from within, or |
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64 | (10) |
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which makes it clear that although swelling is good, shrinking is also good, or |
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74 | (13) |
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which proves beyond reasonable doubt that disguise and treason are everywhere, or |
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Suffixes, Prefixes, Misdivision, and Blends |
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87 | (19) |
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which suggests that in the world of words, anonymity is the greatest reward, or |
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106 | (20) |
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in which history pretends to raise its veil, or |
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Coinages by Known Individuals |
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126 | (9) |
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whose main theme is the mixed blessing of globalization, or |
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135 | (22) |
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in which the plot does not thicken, or |
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A Retrospect: The Methods of Etymology |
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157 | (10) |
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in which etymology becomes a science, rejoices, and then has second thoughts, or |
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167 | (24) |
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in which nothing means what it says, or |
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Change of Meaning in Language History |
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191 | (26) |
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in which the author meanders a little (as is his wont) but then comes to the root of the matter, or |
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The Origin of the Earliest Words and Ancient Roots |
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217 | (19) |
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in which the author surveys the scene and treads the downward slope, or |
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The State of English Etymology |
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236 | (14) |
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in which the author, having reaped the word wind, comes full circle and takes farewell of his readers in the hope of meeting them again, or |
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250 | (3) |
Notes |
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253 | (42) |
Index of English Words |
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295 | (9) |
Name Index |
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304 | (6) |
Subject Index |
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310 | |