578 Sino-Iranica 



Chinese Swi-hien ^K 'fill ("water-fairy"). 1 Giil, of course, is Persian gul 

 ("flower"). Jiisai ("garlic") is not Chinese either. Mdjdzd ("chair") 

 is hardly Chinese, as suggested. 



To the second class belong ton ("cold, frozen"), which is apparently 

 identical with Chinese tun $1 of the same meaning, and tung ("wooden 

 bucket"), which is the equivalent of Chinese fun fl ("tub, barrel"). 

 There are, further, pan ("board"), from Chinese pan $C; yangza ("sort, 

 kind"), from yan-tse H tr; qawd ("gourd"), from kwa I&. 



The word ton-kai ("donkey's knuckle-bones employed in a game") 

 is tentatively marked Chinese. This term is mentioned, with a brief 

 description of the game, in the Manchu Polyglot Dictionary 2 as Chinese 

 (colloquial) tan cen'r kun'r W & & |jt JS and Tibetan t'e-k'ei-gan; the 

 latter is not Tibetan, and without any doubt represents a transcription. 

 The Chinese term, however, may be so likewise. In Manchu, the word 

 toxai denotes the smooth side of the knuckle-bone, and is apparently 

 related to Turk! tonkai. 



The Chinese origin of la-za ("red pepper, pimento") is not to be 

 questioned. It is Chinese la-tse M -?*. 3 Still less can the Chinese charac- 

 ter of 'ir-Mn ("two men," that is, descendant of a Chinese and a Turkish 

 woman) be called into doubt; this, of course, is er Sen -^ A. 



The following Chinese words indicated by Le Coq may be identified, 

 only those of special interest being selected: 



dan, inn, bungalow, from Hen $$. This word has been carried by the Chinese 



all over Central Asia. It has also been traced in Sogdian in the form fim.* 

 go-si, official placards posted in a public place, from kao-U ^ 7j^. 

 sai-pun, tailor, from ts'ai-fun $% ||g. 

 maupan, miller, mill, from mo-fan (cu) Hf J^f Ef* . 

 yan-xo, match, from yan hwo pfc fc. 

 tunci bak, interpreter; the first element from fun-Si JH ^ (see Loan- Words in 



Tibetan, No. 310; and Journal Am. Qr. Soc, 1917, p. 200). 

 Ian, money, from c'ien jt£. 



tl-za, banknotes issued by the Governor of UrumcL from t'i-tse |H J-. 

 joza, table (Le Coq erroneously "chair"), from lo-tse ffi -^p. 

 Ian, bed, from Swan 7^. 



da-dir, kind of horse-bean, perhaps from ta-tou ^C St- 

 dan-za, notebook, from can-tse |ljt -J\ 



Sum-po, title of the Chinese governor, from siinfu ^R $£(?). 

 la-tai, candlestick, from la t'ai $jg, jf . 

 min-lan-za, door-curtain, from men-lin-tse PJ jgs? -J*. 

 yan-yo, potato, from yan yao ^ ^|§. 



1 See, further, above, p. 427. 



2 Cf. K. Himly, T'oung Pao, Vol. VI, 1895, p. 280. 



3 Cf. Loan- Words in Tibetan, No. 237. 



4 F. W. K. MtiLLER, Soghdische Texte, I, p. 104. 



