Teutonic Languages
The general articles Scandinavian Languages (Vol. 24, p. 291), by Dr. Adolf Noreen, professor in the University of Upsala, with sections on Icelandic, Norwegian or Norse, Swedish, and Danish, and the Scandinavian dialects; and Teutonic Languages (Vol. 26, p. 673), by Hector Munro Chadwick, Librarian of Clare College, Cambridge.
More in detail on the Teutonic languages are the articles:
English Language (Vol. 9, pp. 587–600; equivalent to 45 pages of this Guide), by Sir James A. H. Murray, editor-in-chief of the (Oxford) New English Dictionary, and Miss Hilda Mary R. Murray, lecturer on English at the Royal Holloway College.
Dutch Language (Vol. 8, p. 717), by Prof. Johann Hendrik Gallée of the University of Utrecht.
German Language (Vol. 11, p. 777), Dr. Robert Priebsch, professor of German philology, University of London, which deals with modern and ancient, new, middle, and old, high and low German.
For Indo-Iranian languages, see:
Persia and India
Persia: Language and Literature (Vol. 21, p. 246), by Dr. Hermann Ethé, professor of Oriental languages, University College, Wales, dealing with Zend, and Old, Middle and New Persian and modern dialects of Persian.
Indo-Aryan Languages (Vol. 14, p. 487), by George Abraham Grierson, formerly in charge of the Linguistic survey of India, who treats in this article the relations of Pisaca, Prakrit and Sanskrit, and contributes the separate articles Pisaca Languages, Prakrit, Bengali, Bihari, Gujarati and Rajasthani, Hindostani, Kashmiri, and Marathi. More important than these minor dialects are Sanskrit Language (Vol. 24, p. 156), by Dr. Julius Eggeling, professor of Sanskrit, Edinburgh University,—an article equivalent in length to 90 pages of this Guide; and Pali (Vol. 20, p. 630), by Prof. T. W. Rhys Davids of Manchester University, president of the Pali Text Society.