PHILOLOGY
423 Lexicology Dictionaries Idioms
.I Idioms .2 English .3 German, etc. Put a dictionary of two
languages with the less known language. Under 423 put only English.
English dictionaries. Put an English-French dictionary with French,
443.2; a French-Latin dictionary with Latin, 473.4. If in several
languages, put with 413, or with least known. Put French-French
dictionaries 443, not 443.4, so that the standard home dictionaries shall
come first in each language. This plan brings together under each of
the less known, all the dictionaries for translating either into or from
that language. Some prefer to put each dictionary under the first
language; i. e. that by which it is alfabeted. This gives under each
language, regardless of its familiarity, all dictionaries for translating
from it, but none for translating ¢mlo it. These must be sought under
the language from which the translation is to be made. For a cosmo-
politan library this plan is simplest and best; but in an English library,
the first plan, with only English dictionaries in 423, and both ix and
out dictionaries together under little known tungs fs more convenient.
References in either case show what may be found in the other place
Synonyms Homonyms
Grammat
425 includes general works, covering also orthografy and prosody
Morfology Inflection
Divided like 425.2 Syntax; e.g. .5 Nouns, etc. See 422
Syntax
Arrangement of words and clauses
Particular sentences: conditional, hypothetic, etc.
Nouns
Adjectivs Articles
Pronouns
Verbs
Particles
Prosody
See also the hed Prosody, in general grammars 425
Quantity and accent
Versification
Feet
Figures of prosody
Meters
Rimes
Strophe and antistrophe
Textbooks for writing verse
9
427
Dialects Patois Language at different
periods Slang
Subdivided by geografic divisions like 942. The Yorkshire dialect is 427.74;
Gloucestershire dialect 427.41. The dialects of other languages take the
geografic subdivisions of their countries. Dialects not provided for in these
heds ar placed with the last; e. g. American and Scotch with 427.9. The
division re time is made with a sth figure after o; the earliest form of
the language is markt .or; .og is used for modern slang, e. g. 427.01 Old
English