fs 
ere 
a 
re 
Non-Hellenic Portion of the Latin Language. 537 
| Te-ate, in the Sabine district, now Chieti ; 
* Ti-cinum ; 
Ti-fernum, three as before described ; 
* Ti-ora Matiena, in the Sabine Hills, near the source of 
the Velinus. 
It would appear that this prefix was once Tegi or Tig (cog- 
nate with Teyos and Tectum) from combining the following with 
the above :-— 
Tegi-anum in Lucania, on the Tanager, which now, along 
with its valley, is called Diano, an evident cor- 
ruption of Tegianum, and closely allied to the 
Tiano of the coins. 
Tig-ulia in Liguria, now Tre-gosa, a word in which Tre- 
has usurped the place of its synonym Tig or Ty, 
and gwys that of ul. 
Trev and Treva, pronounced Tre, plur. Trevi, under this com- 
mon prefix of the Cumri, we have 
Treva in the Sabini, now Trevi; 
Trevia in Umbria, now Trevi; 
Treia in Picenum ; 
' Tre-bula, Balinea, in Campania ; 
Tre-bula, Mutusca in the Sabini ; 
' This word, compared with Re-ate, shows that the Te was a separable prefix ; 
and the several coins bearing the inscription TIA, proves that its primitive form 
was Ti. ; 
* Now Pavia, probably gave its name to the Ticinus river, the Tessino. 
5 The meaning of 'Ti-ora, “* Ty. oera,” is “ coldest house,” a fit name for its si- 
tuation. 
* These names, compared with Ves-bula, will shew that Tre is a separable pre- 
fix, and if Lanzr (page 508, vol. ii.), is right in affirming, on the faith of inscrip- 
tions, that the citizens of this town were called TREBALAces, as the Brutii are 
called by Enntus Brutaces, it will necessarily follow that the name of the city was 
originally Tre-bala (see Bala in the list of roots), The epithet Balinea, is confir- 
mative of this explanation. ; 
