on Chinese sentence-words, [317];
on Aristotle’s logic as based on Greek grammar, [320], [321];
on philology proving that human thought has proceeded from the abstract to the concrete, [334-336];
on names necessarily implying concepts, [336], [337];
on fundamental metaphor, [344], [345];
on imperfection of early names, [356];
on the evolution of parts of speech, [423];
on the general theory of evolution, [432], [433]
N
Names, in relation to abstract and generic ideas, [31], [32], [57], [58], [70-78], [174], [273-281], [336-339];