S.SO. SUPPLEMENT. ' 95 



for active, and taq^ gag, .■i.saq for passive verbs, and as for the 

 rest merely by juxtaposition, f. e. The man who departed yesterday 

 Iniik igpagssaq antdlartoq. The man M'ho vv^as seen y. in. igp. 

 takussaq, the latter generally v^^sf. , f. a. takiissarput (our seen) 

 whom we saw. The reciprocal Pr. are rendered, as regards ex- 

 clusively transitive verbs, by using them without suffix or object 

 (see Vol. 1 p. 59). As for the rest they are translated by ingme, 

 ingminik and nangmineq (see S. 2,1). interrogative Pr., who Una, 

 what suna. 



ADVERBS. 



If not in the shape of affixes, they are generally rendered by 

 the Modalis mik, f. e. in the first place sajugdlermik, the next time 

 klngngdlermik. Than , in the comparative sense , by the Ablative 

 mit, f. е. greater than a reindeer tugfnmit anglneruvoq. Like , by 

 Apposition ttif. , f. e. speaks like a native imujtut oqalugpoq. How 

 qanoq. 



CONJUNCTIONS. 



>ot only, by Afx. inåungitsoq. Whether (asking), by Afx. .^ora- 

 Ingo (meaning) , f. e. I asked him whether he would start aperâra 

 autdlåsasoralugo (meaning that he w. s.). Since, by conjunctive in 

 connexion with kingorna (afterwards) , f. e. Since we started we 

 have taken no rest autdlaravta kingorna uningilagat. 



Both — and, by repeating the Particle /0, f. e. arnatdlo ungut itdlo, 

 both women and men. Or, by the appended Part. lânU. That, by 

 flexion and affixes , f. e. He said that the kayacker had not yet 

 arrived qajaq sale tikingitsoq oqantiga (the k. , him who st. n. h. 

 arr. he spoke about); he pelted it with stones that it might break 

 ujarqanik milorpâ aserorqnvdliigo (qimt causes or wishes it). If. 

 by the subjunctive mood. Therefore taimâ-imat (as it was so). 



PREPOSITIONS. 



Tlie Casus locales or Appositions are used figuratively almost 

 just as the corresponding prepositions in other languages. Besides 

 them and the ,, words of place" (see Vol. I p. 52) also several 

 affixes are used, f. e. lik with (having) ; ilaq, qångitsoq (having none) 

 withont. 



II. THE ANGAKOK LANtiUAGE. In Vol. I occasionally some 

 words are inserted from the idiom used by the conjurers in pract- 

 ising the invocation of their guardian spirits and other ceremonies. 

 To the ancient lists of words from this language in Greenland , by 

 P. Egede and Fabricius, the only sources we hitherto have possessed, 

 we are now able to add a similar one, procured by Dr. F. Boas 

 from Baffin's-land. A comparison of these lists with the ordinaiy 

 language offers several interesting points, especially so far as the 

 said magicians, besides exchanging the signification of existing words, 



