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Proceedings of the Modern Language Association of America

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 February 2021

Abstract

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Copyright
Copyright © Modern Language Association of America, 1890

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Footnotes

*

The Secretary of the Association regrets that in editing these Proceedings he is unable to refer the reader directly to the pages of the Publications where the papers read before the Convention have appeared, or will appear, in full. The irregularity with which papers have come into his hands for publication makes page-refernce impossible at present: it has original papers have not yet appeared in the Publications.

References

page iii note † Cf. Appendix iv, at the end of these Proceedings.

page iv note * Cf. Appendix iii, at the end of these Preccedings.

page xi note * Published in Supplement to vol. v, no, s of Publications, pp. 175–184, under the title: “Modern Ideas in the Middle Ages.”

page xvii note * Cf, 'Visibel Speech,' p. 46, with diagrams on pp. 73 and 74. 'Sounds and their Relations,' p. 36. 'Manual of Visible Speech and Vocal Physiology,' §67, p. 45. Also Orro Jespersen,' The Articulations of Speech Sounds,' §28, p. 19.

1 See Supplement to vol. v, no. 2, of the Publications, pp. 185–199.

2 Prof. Joynes referred to the clebrated Concord Academy, of Frederick W. Coleman. See “Virginia Schools before and after the Revolution” —an address before the Society of Alumni of the University of Virginia, 1888, by W. Gordon McCabe.

page xxxiv note * In the absence of Professor Th. W. Hunt (Princeton College), the heading of the paper presented by him, entitled “Independent Literary Judgment,” and put down as No. I, of the Fourth General Session, was omitted. For a syllabus of this paper, see Appendix II, at the end of these Proceedings.

page xlvii note * Cf. Appendix, iii, at the end of these Proceedings.

page lx note * This was in reply to a remark that Coleridge thought the French language had only short, tripping sentences.