178 Grammar of the 



itantatek^a^ennon, or, stantatetisennon — thou ; stantate' 

 tiondese — 1 and he ; stantateties'e, stantatetiestet'e, stantate 

 tia,ises'e — we and he ; stantate fiknese', stantatetiskaese', or 

 stantate tisk>iennon. To express the third person it is said 

 stanteUre^se, stanteHhaaennon. Stante'thes^e, or, stafite- 

 thondeniion they several. 



Imperative, se — go, depart ; sarasAm — let him go ; ste — 

 go ye ; tsarask^a. To express this sentence, come here, or 

 this, go from there to come here, a is prefixed to the 

 imperative, as, asarask^ia — go from there to come here j 

 ^aroaste, or aoaste — come here ; and thus of all verbs of 

 motion, as, tson — enter; atson — enter here; tsion — enter 

 ye there ; atsion — enter here ; tontasion — enter, tontas 

 araskva — come from there here, go from there where you 

 were, go to return here. 



NoTK — The same verbs of motion as are used to signify 

 to go, as to signify to come, of the same person, the marks 

 of locality are prefixed ; but when they express the word to 

 go, no person is prefixed, as, haraskna — he goes; etharas- 

 hsa — he comes from that place ; horaskaan — he is gone ; 

 ethorask^an — he is gone from there to come here ; eharaskva 

 — he has just gone ; ontaharask'>ia — he has just gone to come 

 here; aharaskua — let him go; aontaharaskva — let him come 

 here ; eharaskva — he will go ; ethoraskna — he will come 

 here. 



Optative, oidi sente^e — that 1 wont go ; isasentechie, not 

 sen'chri. But to signify that he does not come, it is said 

 sentetre, as in the manner we have explained. 



Mixed difficulties which occur in verbs of motion, occur 

 then, when at the same time are indicated negation, re- 

 duplication, and locality, which particles ought to be 

 place, which follow will be explained by the following 



