45 



Identical Roots. 



669. Gau. a bullock. Cfr. s. gau^; e. cow ; jap. glu; K. p. 370. 



670. Ge. M. GiH. D. Nge. Ms. Ge or Ngi. C. Gak. To laugh; 

 to cackle. Cfr. gr. ytldu) ; e. g^'ggle. v. Gac, Loo. 



671. 'La'i. M. Lae. To split. Cfr. g. greissen. 



672. 'Lai. M. Le. Ms. Li. D. Ly. C. Lei. To plough; earthy 

 streaks. 'Lie. M. Leih. Ms. Lie. The rut of a wheel. Cfr. 

 g. gJeis. [Cfr. gr. yXta. 



673. 'Li'. M. Le. A kind of glue or paste, used in making shoes. 



674. 'Lin. M. Lin. C. Lam. Ignis fotuus; fire light. Cfr. g. 

 gli77imen, glinstern ; e. glimmer, gleam. [1. glohus. 



675. 'Lo'. A patrol of soldiers ; to surround as by mountains. Cfr. 



676. 'Log. M. Lo, Luh. C. Lok. Pleasure; exultation; happiness. 

 Cfr. g. glilck. 



677. 'Lu'. M. Loo or Leu. The skin. Cfr. 1. glubo, gluma. 



678. 'Lu. M. LiiH. Green. Cfr. g. grun. [Cfr. gr. yw^a. 



679. Go'. M., p., C, Ms. Go. Ms., D. Ngo. A horn; deflected. 



680. Go', a kind offish. Cfr. gr. ydpoz) 1- gohio ; g. guhe. 



681. Go'. I. Cfr. gr. lymv; s. aham; 1. ego.^ 



682. Go'. A goose. Cfr. ags. ^os; e. goose, gosling, 



683. Go' or No. False; to alter. Go. M. Go. One who has nought 

 but specious appearances. Cfr. gr. yorjq; e. no ; g. gaukel. 



684. Go'. Good. Cfr. goth, goda, gods, goth ; ags. god ; d. goed; 

 g. gut. 



685. Go'. Exceedingly lame. Cfr. gr. yutoq. [on. Cfr. ags., e. cot. 



686. Go-ta. M. Go Ta. ''Sleep-couch;" a board or bed to sleep 



687. 'Van. M. Wan. Great. Cfr. 1. grandis. 



G, AS IN Gun. II. Cognate Roots and Analogues. 



688. Ga'. M. Ya. C. a, Ya, or Ga. A bud. Ciu. M. Keuh. 

 To bud forth. Cfr. 1. germen, gemma. 



689. Ga'. Gaping. Cfr. g. giihnen, gaffen ; e. gap, gape. 



* Rev. Edward Hincks, D.D., in his article "On the Forms of the Personal 

 Pronouns of the Two First Persons in the Indian, European, Syro-Arabic, and 

 Egyptian Languages," read before the Brit. Assoc, in 1852, assumed a form 

 anwis or anus, from which the Semitic anu, Sanscrit viyam, Latin nos, and 

 Teutonic ^cis or wir, were all derived. 



The Chinese has all the following forms for the pronouns of the first person : 

 Go' or (Go'; Vo'; No'; Nu^g or Cxu^g; Ga'n or ^Gan. By the addition of the 

 Sanscrit visarga, or terminal breathing, no' becomes no's, from which an((S 

 would be readily derived. 



