2l8 TRANfS. ST. LOUIS ACAD. SCIENCE. 



79. a ligature of the eare.l-snake (0^06) and a cave. pHfi, rjan 

 (hapop), expresses finfi, x33 (baba), antrum, spelunca, fovea. 

 G., to the contrary, takes tliis group for " his," notwithstanding 

 the figure of a cave. See PI. xxx. 429, a and b. 



80. This hieroglyph, sliamefully altered by B., clearly denotes 

 a bird's nest, ma,^, and expresses mo§^ lumina, alias ava^, linum. 

 G.y^. p.65. No. 267. T.B. 85, 9; 10, 17, 16; 54, 3; 142, 7. G. 

 translates " issues," probably because the young birds issue forth 

 their heads. 



81. The representation of a mast, called xe^p, signifies //' in the 

 name of king Taft-^ipr^q {w Trxpzepr^c), the eighth king of the 

 5th Manethonian dynasty on Manetho's autograph at Turin. The 

 figure can be referred to the Rabbinic root smi^ (adara), velum 

 navis, but at any rate expresses / in Trajanus, and Toip, TopTwp, 

 infigeie, in our place. .Since this sail, as will be seen in T. B. 

 99' 33' Js sometimes preceded by the letters nj"/, preposterously 

 referred to mqi, spirare, the luxuriant fancy of Ch. made out that 

 the same sail expressed spirit, wind, and the like. Accordingly 

 G. translates it " wind," without noticing that the added hill, ex, 

 forms the participle " infixed." 



82. The so careful copier of Egyptian inscriptions, Mr.Brugsch 

 Bey, transforms the hill into a calf's head, i.e. / into (ro-e/, and G., 

 by means of a magic agency, elicits from our group the notion 

 "north," and with the preceding "the north wind." The hill 

 Tooir a. T06, the Hebrew m (taf), gives Ton. gremium. 



83 is to be spelled a/ip, owing to the name of the pullet ^c\uoti, 

 and refers to a.-ro, a. a.1jo, the Greek irrsc. See T. S., R. S., T. 

 B., in numberless places. G. fetches out the meaning, " to, for 

 the purpose." 



84, See Nos. 5, 102, 210. 



85, See Nos. 49, 52. The representation of tlie brain cvn.*. 

 expressed dvax-z as well as :;'i:n (enosh), the original nJN (anach) 

 and i:n (anoch), properly soul. G. takes the flax, like Ch., for 

 intransitive, and discovers the new definition " to enliven." 



86, the notorious x^"^' alius, which is the third word of our 

 text correctly translateu by G. 



87, ^D (kol), all. See 39, 44, 51, 119, 201, 202, etc. 



88, called noi^T, expresses very often nt. G. ^-E. p. 100, No. 

 532 ; see PI. xxxi. No. 427, a. According to G., this group with 



