94 "THE INFINITE'' AND "THE FINITE. 



or Comprehensible sense, such as is Relative, or 

 Related to our Comprehension or Capacity of Under- 

 standing. Hence it is The Ordinary or Non-tran- 

 scendental Infinite. If we, then, add the Nasalization, 

 (97, 153, 156) as the sign of Incomprehensibility, we have 

 au n io, meaning The Absolutely Infinite or Transcen- 

 dental Beality, rationally inferred, but incomprehen- 

 sible, or, in simple terms, " THE ABSOLUTE." In this 

 latter coupling, the meanings are as follows : 



1. Au,io, " The Infinite " (The Unlimited ; The Homogeneous.) 



2. Au n io, "The Absolute" (The Incomprehensible, "The Un- 



knowable.") 



The termination -ski (skee) means science or lore 

 (German -lehre, 24.) Auski means, therefore, Phil- 

 osophy in the general or ordinary sense (Empiri- 

 cal), and au n ski means, specifically, Transcendental 

 (or Cardinary) Philosophy, (purely Rational.) 



127. We may, in the next place, assume the Con- 

 sonants ng, k, v, 1, as the appropriate representative 

 group of those Sounds (including one of each Con- 

 sonant Class) to denote the Consonants at large, or 

 all the Consonants, as au was chosen to denote the 

 Vowels (126.) Aided in utterance by the au, (the Con- 

 sonants so require the Yowels), and (if preferred) by a 

 prosthetic e, we have ngkauvlio or engkauvlio (eng- 

 kah-oo-vlee-o) to mean " THE FINITE," or The Lim- 

 itary (the function of the Consonants being Limita- 

 tion). Coupled in this sense we have : 



1. Au,io, '' The Infinite " (Relative, Common, or Ordinari/.} 



2. Engkauvlio, "The Finite" (Eiigkiiuvlski, Echosophy, B. 0. t. 



13 and c. J3 do.) 



