[237] Introduction, &c., ii. 301. Or, as Wundt puts it, “Die demonstrative Wurzel ist daher eine demonstrirende Pantomime in einen Laut übersetzt” (Vorlesungen, &c., ii. 392).
[238] Sayce, Introduction, &c., i. 415. See also F. Müller, loc. cit., I. i. 2, p. 2, for another statement of the same facts referred to by Sayce.
[239] Sayce, Introduction, &c., i. 416.
[240] Sweet, Words, Logic, and Grammar, in Trans. Philo. Soc., 1867, p. 493.
[241] Science of Thought, p. 442.
[242] See especially Garnett, On the Nature and Analysis of the Verb.
[243] Science of Thought, p. 223.
[244] Ibid., p. 442.
[245] Sayce, Introduction, &c.
[246] I refer the reader to what is said on both these aspects of the verb in question by my opponents (see pp. 165-167.)