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A consequent application will sometimes be inferred from the metaphorical usage, English which cannot be inferred from the literal.

"To admit an opinion, to admit the propriety or force of an apology, excuse, argument, &c." is, consequently, "To grant, to concede, to agree, to assent.”

These are the main divisions which it will be incumbent upon the lexicographer to observe in the explanation of different words; and they may be thus methodically disposed:

Lexicon.

1. The etymology, with the literal meaning, applied literally or to material objects: Plan. with the words similarly applied.

2. The metaphorical application of this meaning to the human mind; and the words similarly applied.

3. The application consequent or inferred from the literal meaning.

4. The application consequent, or inferred from that which is metaphorical.

But the greater portion of language will admit of this comprehensive yet simple distribution:

The etymology, and literal meaning, literally and metaphorically employed; with the words of similar application.

Whatever divisions, however, may occur, each must be attended by proper autho- Authorities. rities; those for the literal meaning (whenever they can be produced) will claim the first place; those for the metaphorical and consequent usage, must take their stations in due succession.

A few words are required to explain the manner of proceeding with compound Compounds. words; and this may be done most clearly by examples in illustration from those which we have derived immediately from the Latin. Take the compounds of Duco, and Traho.

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To abduce, adduce, conduce, deduce, induce, &c.

To abstract, attract, contract, detract, distract, &c.

The difference of meaning, it is obvious, arises from the different preposed or prefixed words; ab, ad, con, de, dis, in. The Latin compound, then, should be separated into its component parts; each part should be rendered into equivalent (or rather equivocal) English, and no other difference be allowed in the explanation than the prefix itself expresses.

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Periods of the Lan

guage.

Advantages of Chrono

tions.

Lexicon.

And so with the rest: then in each case must of course (to use the word of an English old chronicler*), subsecute the words synonimously applied.

To revert to the authorities: The writers, from whose works citations are to be made, may advantageously be classed into periods; and each word, when it is possible, should be supported by authorities within each period.

The first period must commence with the rhyming chronicles of Robert of Gloucester, and Robert of Brunne; and terminate with the writers, whose powers were invigorated by their exertions in the struggle with the see of Rome, during the reign of Henry VIII. and his two immediate successors,

The second will extend from the accession of Elizabeth, to the return of Charles II.; or from Hooker and Shakespeare, to Milton and J. Taylor.

The third, from the Restoration to the establishment of the House of Hanover upon the throne; or from Waller and Barrow, to Pope and Samuel Clarke:

The fourth, from the time of George II, through that of his present majesty (in itself a period of nearly sixty years):-the great names of Cowper and Paley, of Horsley and Watson, will close the catalogue. All living writers must submit to a bar of exclusion.

The first period, as the least explored, and the longest in duration, seems not only to permit, but to demand that citations should be adduced with a hand so lavish, as sometimes to risk the imputation of wasteful liberality; and in every period, fullness and freedom will be considered as the more pardonable error, if it be an error at all to prefer dullness to a dearth of information; and to expose those who are in search of knowledge to some degree of tediousness, when there is no other path to the knowledge they are or pretend to be desirous of acquiring.

By the arrangement of the citations chronologically, some view may be taken logical cita of the progressive changes of the language; and more particularly so by the use of early and succeeding translators: among whom, the translators of the Bible stand pre-eminent.,.

It will contribute much to the more effectual attainment of so useful an object, if translations of the same passages are produced; that we may consider the manner in which writers of different ages endeavoured, according to the changes which had been made in the language, to signify the same ideas.

* Hall, p. 404.

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Lexicon.

The word explained, and its immediate derivatives, may be classed together: English of such derivatives no explanation is necessary. Thus:

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A general Preface must ascertain the force of the terminations.

It is upon

the force of terms, or the number of ideas they are employed to denote, that the lexicographer, in his peculiar province, must bestow his labour: the grammarian must settle their manner of signification.

By thus classing the words with their immediate derivatives together, a Derivatives. glance will acquaint us with the barrenness or fertility of the parent branch; some abuses, which have been admitted in the process of composition, will be, with little difficulty, distinguished; and some guide will also be presented to direct our efforts for the improvement of our native tongue by the accumulation of new terms.

Thus, from a comparison of the words Reduce and Educe, words formed from the same root, it will be seen that we have supplied ourselves much more abundantly with the immediate derivatives from the former, than the latter compound.

Enough, however, has been said for the present purpose; which was barely this-to lay down with clearness, the broad principles upon which a Dictionary of the English language may be so constructed as to accomplish a decisive advancement in lexicographical learning; and to note a peculiarity or two in the manner of execution.

And is it a very culpable degree of presumption to assert--that by a Dictionarycomposed with all possible observance of such principles, copiously and (may it prove) judiciously illustrated, such decisive advancement will be indisputably accomplished?

In it an effort will be made to establish and to exemplify the just principles. of etymology; and to mark and preserve that wide and most important distinction, which the Coryphoeus of modern philology has so satisfactorily proved

OR,

UNIVERSAL DICTIONARY OF KNOWLEDGE,

On an Original Plan:

COMPRISING THE TWOFOLD ADVANTAGE OF

A PHILOSOPHICAL AND AN ALPHABETICAL ARRANGEMENT,

WITH APPROPRIATE ENGRAVINGS.

EDITED BY

THE REV. EDWARD SMEDLEY, M.A.,

LATE FELLOW OF SIDNEY COLLEGE, CAMBRIDGE;

THE REV. HUGH JAMES ROSE, B.D.,

PRINCIPAL OF KING'S COLLEGE, LONDON;

AND

THE REV. HENRY JOHN ROSE, B.D.,

LATE FELLOW OF ST. JOHN'S COLLEGE, CAMBRIDGE.

VOLUME XIV.

[MISCELLANEOUS AND LEXICOGRAPHICAL, VOL. 1.]

LONDON:

B. FELLOWES; F. AND J. RIVINGTON; DUNCAN AND MALCOLM; SUTTABY AND CO.; E. HODGSON; J. DOWDING;
G. LAWFORD; J. M. RICHARDSON ; J. BOHN; T. ALLMAN; J. BAIN; S. HODGSON; F. C. WESTLEY; L. A. LEWIS;
T. HODGES; AND H. WASHBOURNE; ALSO J. H. PARKER, AND T. LAYCOCK, OXFORD;

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