________________
TRÜBNER & CO.'S LIST OF NEW PUBLICATIONS.
6d
ENGLISH PHILOLOGY. A DICTIONARY OF ENGLISH ETYMOLOGY. BY HENSLEIGH WEDGWOOD,
M.A., late Fellow of Christ's College, Cambridge. In 3 volumes. Vol. I, embracing letters A to D. Svo. Pp. xxiv, 508. clothi.
148 "Dietionaries are a class of books not usually esteemed light reading: hut no intelligent mau were to be pitied who should find himself shut up on a rainy day, in a lonely house, in the dreariest part of Salisbury Plain, with no other means of recreation than that which Mr. Wedgwood'a Dietionary of English Etymology eould afford him. lle would read it through from cover to cover at a sitting, and only regret that he had not the second volume to begin upon forthwith. It is a very able book, of great research, full of delightful surprises, a repertory of the fairy tales of linguistie seienee."-Speetator. PROPOSALS for the publication of a NEW ENGLISH DICTIONARY. By the
Philological Society. 8vo. pp. 32. sewed. CANONES LEXICOGRAPHICI; or Rules to be observed in editing the
New English Dictionary of the Philological Society, prepared by a Committee of the Society. Svo. pp. 12. sewed.
6d THE PHILOLOGICAL SOCIETY'S NEW ENGLISH DICTIONARY. Basis
of Comparison. Third Period. Eighteenth and Nineteenth centuries. Part I. A to D. Svo. pp. 2+, sewed.
60 A GLOSSARIAL INDEX to the printed English Literature of the Thirteenth
Century. By HERBERT COLERIDGE. Eso.. of Lincoln's Inn, Barristerat-law. In 1 vol. 8vo. cloth, pp. 103.
58 AN ETYMOLOGICAL ANALYSIS OF ALL ENGLISH WORDS, being a
list of all the Prefixes, Roots, and Suffixes in English, with all the words containing each Prefix, Root, and Suffix under it. Made by Dr. C. LOTTNER, of the University of Berlin, and edited by F. J. FURNIVALL, Esq., M.A., Trin Hall, Cambridge, Editor of the Philo
logical Society's Proposed New English Dictionary. Svo. (In the Press.) A CONCISE EARLY ENGLISH DICTIONARY for the period 1250—1526,
the Beginning of Early English to the Date of the First English New Testament. Edited by F. J. FURNIVALL, Esq., M.A., Trin. Hall, Cam
bridge. Svo. (In the Press.) A CONCISE MIDDLE-ENGLISH DICTIONARY for the period 1526-1671,
the date of the First English New Testament to Milton's death. Edited
by F. J. FURNIVALL, Eso., M.A. Sro. (In the Press.) ON THE STUDY OF MODERN LANGUAGES in general, and of the
English Language in particular. An Essay. By DAVID ASIER, Pui.D. 12mo. cloth, pp. viii, 80.
2s I have read Dr. Asher's Essay on the Study of the Modern Languages with profit and pleasure, and think it might be usefully reprinted here. It would open to many English students of their own language some interesting points from which to regard it, and suggest to them works bearing upon it which otherwise they might not have heard of. Any weakness which it has in respect of the absolute ur relative value of English author's does not matcrially atlect its value. -RICHARD C. TRENCH.
-1 l'estminster, June 25, 1859." DICTIONARY OF AMERICANISMS: A Glossary of Words and Phrases
colloquially used in the United States. By Joix RCSSELL BARTLETT. Second Edition, considerably enlarged and improved. 1 vol. 8vo. pp. xxxii, 524. cloth.
16s SUFFOLK SURNAMES. BY N. I. BOWDITCH. Third Edition. 8vo. pp. xxvi, 758. cloth.
158