[182] See Robin and Verdeil: “Chimie anatomique,” ii. p. 44.
[183] Appendix to Greenwell’s “British Barrows” (1877), p. 645.
[184] Daa: “On the Languages of the Northern Tribes of the Old and New Continents,” in the “Transactions of the Philological Society” (1856), p. 256.
[185] “Sir George Grey’s Library,” i. p. 167; and A. Kaufmann: “Das Gebiet des weissen Flusses und dessen Bewohner” (1861), quoted by Max Müller: “Lectures,” 8th edition, ii. p. 178.
[186] See, however, Ascoli’s ingenious attempt to remove the phonological difficulties in his “Studj Critici,” ii. (1877), pp. 386-396.
[187] For a recent English examination of the subject see Douse: “Grimm’s Law: a Study” (1876), and Rhŷs’s review in the “Academy,” Jan. 12, 1878; also Murray and Nicol in the “Academy,” Feb. 23, March 2 and 16, 1878.
[188] The table of consonants is taken from Rhŷs: “Lectures on Welsh Philology,” p. 17.
[189] Before υ.
[190] In the middle of a word, e.g. ruber (ἐρυθρός).
[191] P did not exist in the early Keltic languages; hence proper names like Menapia must be treated as non-Aryan, or at all events as non-Keltic.