Notes and Queries, Number 56, November 23, 1850 by Various
page 14 of 60 (23%)
page 14 of 60 (23%)
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_brugnon_. The Germans also call it _glatte Pfirsche_.
Can any of your readers inform me what is the Armenian word for _apricot_, and whether there is any reason to believe that the Arabic words for _apricot_ and _peach_, are of Armenian and Persian origin? If it is so, the resemblance of the one to _præcox_, and of the other to _persicum_, will be a curious coincidence, but hardly more curious than the resemblance of [Greek: pascha] with [Greek: paschô] which led some of the earlier fathers, who were not Hebraists, to derive [Greek: pascha] from [Greek: paschô]. E.C.H. * * * * * MINOR NOTES. _Chaucer's Monument._--It may interest those of your readers who are busying themselves in the praiseworthy endeavour to procure the means of repairing Chaucer's Monument, especially Mr. Payne Collier, who has furnished, in the November Number of the _Gentleman's Magazine_ (p. 486.), so curious an allusion from Warner's _Albion's England_, to "---- venerable Chaucer, lost Had not kind Brigham reared him cost," to know that there is evidence in Smith's _Life of Nollekens_, vol. i. p. 79., that remains of the painted figure of Chaucer were to be seen in Nolleken's times. Smith reports a conversation between the artist and Catlin, so many years the principal verger of the abbey, in which Catlin inquires, |
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