Heb. i'^'\n, auil, evil, folly ; — Irish olc, ^)t)5f )t, terrible, dreadful, 

 pronounced aveil. 



Heb. "jin hult to howl; — Ir. tiditt, a howl ; gul, weeping, wailing. 

 Heb. |*>ij iin, wine ; Gr. otvof ; Lat. vinum ; Ir. ^5^ oi" yI^^* 

 Heb. I'i'iu; sariz, to multiply, increase ; Lat. cresco ; Gr. co^oj, 

 a heap ; Irish bfe^ , an increase ; f $t<, exceedingly ; ^ttft<cf excess ; 

 fctftujd-D, exceeding; C|tu<i6, a heap, a rick, a pile. 



Heb. tflN"?, /a^ to hide, Lat. lateo ; Ir. I<t6<tt), to dive, -^almt, a 

 cover, i. e. -y^Jc, under, and lufbe- lying, i. e. a lying under. 



Heb. ps^ dik, a mound, fortification, dyke; Ir. -o^c and xi% a 

 dyke. 



Heb. ^iy oied, to labour, to serve ; Lat. opus, a work, obedio, to 

 obey, Ir. obctj^, work, if6tii6f , cmrfiSf or 6t)iii6)TD, homage, obedience. 

 Heb. *i)i?u; SMCCMZ, juice, moisture ; Lat. auccus ; Irish ^5 or fub 

 juice. 



Heb. N"!!? Arara, to cry, to crow ;--Ir. 5tt)n a cry, ^tft<t cries; 

 5<t)|itti calling, crowing ; Lat. garrio, to babble, to prate, to chirp 

 as a bird, to chatter ; Gr. yri^vu, or •ya§va, <yt]gvg, a voice ; >'j«^, 

 garun, the throat ; 5<l)nce a narrow path ; f 5g|ttict6 the throat. 

 Heb. pi? keren, a horn ; Latin cornu ; Ir. co^-n, a horn, a cup. 

 Heb. p^^, tzuk, to confine, straiten ; hence, choak, check, in Eng- 

 lish ; Irish c<tcc, choak ; •fotc silence ; '{C)OC, congeal, straiten. 



Heb. ni» tnuth ; death ; Irish wiuc, extinguish, suffocate ; wedc 

 decay. 



Similar etymologies might be extended to considerable length. 

 These few are adduced as proofs of the close coimection between the 

 Hebrew and Celtic, and the other dialects into which those lan- 

 guages insinuate themselves, and which are derived from them as 

 common parents. On the same plan, philological investigations might 



