Part 259 (1/2)

31 IN, or the Saxon In, is the same as the Latin _in_: the Greek is [Greek: en]; and the French, _en_

32 INTO, like the Saxon Into, noting entrance, is a colish prepositions, are poetical forms used for _A_, is fro_, which, by itself, _ 35 OF is from the Saxon Of, or Af; which is supposed by Tooke to co_

36 OFF, opposed to _on_, Dr Johnson derives from the ”Dutch _af_”

37 ON, a word very often used in Anglo-Saxon, is traced by soists to the Gothic _ana_, the German _an_, the Dutch _aan_; but no such derivation fixes its

38 OUT, [Sax Ut, Ute, or Utan,] when made a preposition, is probably from the adverb or adjective _Out_, or the earlier _Ut_; and OUT-OF, [Sax

Ut-of,] opposed to _Into_, is but the adverb _Out_ and the preposition _Of_--usually written separately, but better joined, in solo-Saxon Ofer, _over_; and this, probably, froher_

40 OVERTHWART,_across_, is a compound of _over_ and _thwart_, cross

41 PAST, _beyond, gone by_, is a contraction from the perfect participle _passed_

42 PENDING, _during_ or _hanging_, has a participial form, but is either an adjective or a preposition: we do not use _pend_ alone as a verb, though we have it in _depend_

43 RESPECTING, _concerning_, is from the first participle of the verb _respect_

44 ROUND, a preposition for _about_ or _around_, is from the noun or adjective _round_

45 SINCE is most probably a contraction of the old word _Sithence_; but is conjectured by Tooke to have been formed from the phrase, ”_Seen as_”

46 THROUGH [, Sax Thurh, or Thurch,] seeain to Thuru, or Duru, a _Door_

47 THROUGHOUT, _quite through_, is an obvious coh_ and _out_

48 TILL, [Sax Til or Tille,] _to, until_, is from the Saxon Til or Till, _an end, a station_

49 TO, whether a preposition or an adverb, is froard to_, is from the first participle of the verb _touch_

51 TOWARD or TOWARDS, written by the Anglo-Saxons _Toweard_ or _Toweardes_, is a couard, a look-out; ”Used in composition to express _situation_ or _direction_”--_Bosworth_

52 UNDER, [Gothic, Undar; Dutch, Onder,] _beneath, below_, is a colo-Saxon word, and very frequent prefix, affir but _on-neder_,” a Dutch compound = _on lower_--See _Diversions of Purley_, Vol i, p 331

53 UNDERNEATH is a compound of _under_ and _neath_, lohence _nether_, lower

54 UNTIL is a compound from _on_ or _un_, and till, or _til_, the end