7.—MAGYAR.
- Debreczeny, (391.)
- Eperies, (391.)
- Pesth, (391.)
- Transylvanian, (491.)
8.—GERMAN.
- Ancient Gothic, (464.)
- Rhetian (Grisons,) (Appendix.)
- Sette Communi dialect, (218.)
- Dialects of Northern and Southern Germany, (243.)
9.—FRENCH.
- Provençal, (275.)
- Tolosan, (440.)
- Burgundian, (444.)
- Gascon, (463.)
- Bearnais, (440.)
- Lorraine, (463.)
- Bas Breton, (439.)
10.—ENGLISH.
- Somersetshire, Yorkshire, and Lancashire dialects, (404.)
- Lowland Scotch, (437.)
I should add that many of these dialects, as the Moorish and Berber Arabic, the Spanish of Majorca, the Provençal French, the Italian of Sicily and Sardinia, and the language of the Grisons or Graubünden, might most justly be described as separate languages, at least as regards the difficulty of acquisition. In the catalogue of the Cavaliere Minarelli a series of languages (the very names of which the reader probably never has heard,) are enumerated, chiefly of the central and South American families—of the former, the Cora, the Tepehuana, the Mistek, the Othomi, the Maya; of the latter, the Paraguay, the Omagua, the Aymara, the Canisiana, and the Mobima. I am not aware of the authority on which the Cavaliere relies in reference to these languages. For the majority of them, I must say that I cannot find in the catalogue of the Cardinal’s library any distinct trace whatever of his having studied them; but it is certain that he had given his attention early to the languages of these countries; that he had opportunities in Bologna of conversing with ex-Jesuit missionaries from the central and South American provinces; and that the library of the Propaganda, of which he had the unrestricted use, contains many printed and manuscript elementary works in languages of which little trace is elsewhere to be found.