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The Contents of the Chapters.
CHAP. XI. | ||
Of Vowels. | p.363 | |
CHAP. XII. | ||
Of Consonants. | p.366 | |
CHAP. XIII. | ||
Of Compound Vowels, and Consonants. | p.370 | |
CHAP. XIV. | ||
I. | Of the Accidents of Letters, I. Their Names. II. Their Order. III. Affinities and Oppositions. IV. Their Figures, with a twofold Instance of a more regular Character for the Letters, The later of which may be styled Natural. V. of Pronunciation. VI. The several Letters dis-used by several Nations. | p.347 |
The Fourth Part Containing a Real Character, and a Philosophical Language. | ||
CHAPTER. I. | ||
The proposal of one kind of Real Character (amongst many other which might be offered) both for all Integrals, whether Genus's, Differences or Species; together with the derivations and Inflexions belonging to them, as likewise for all the several kinds of Particles. |
page,385 | |
CHAP. II. | ||
An Instance of this Real Character, in the Lord's Prayer and the Creed. |
p.395 | |
CHAP. III. | ||
How this Real Character may be made effable in a distinct Language, and what kind of Letters or Syllables may be conveniently assigned to each Character. |
p.414 | |
CHAP. IV. | ||
Instance of this Philosohical Language, both in the Lord's Prayer and the Creed: A comparison of the Language here proposed, with fifty others, as to the facility and Euphonicalness of it. |
p.421 | |
CHAP. V. | ||
Directions for the more easy learning of this Character and Language, with a brief Table containing the Radicals, both Integrals and Particles; together with the Character and Language, by which each of them are to be expressed |
p.439 | |
CHAP. VI. | ||
The Appendix containing a Comparison betwixt this Natural Philosophical Grammar and that of other Instituted Languages, particularly the Latin, in respect of the multitude of unnecessary Rules and of Anomalisms, concerning the China character: The several Attemps and Proposals made by others, towards and new kind of Character and Language. The advantage in respect of facility, which this Philosophical Language hath above the Latin. |
p.441 |
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