MICHELSON | ALGONQUIAN LINGUISTIC GROUPS 251 
YE, intrans. no correspondent; nearest P., N.; cf. also Oj., Ot., A.; 
for last syllable cf. C. 
YE—ME no correspondent; nearest N.; cf. also A., Oj., Ot. 
YE—Uvs (excl.) no correspondent. 
YE—HIM agreement with C., D. 
YE—THEM an. agreement with C., D. 
YE—IT no correspondent. 
YE—THEM inan. no correspondent. 
HE—Uws (excl.) no correspondent; for the structure cf. HE—Us 
(inel.) 
HE—US (incl.) agreement with C. 
HE—YOU agreement with C., F. 
HE—HIM agreement with C., F. (N.?). 
_HE—THEM an. agreement with C., F. (N.?). 
HE—IT agreement with C., F., P., N., Oj. (one form). 
THEY an.—us (excl.) no correspondent; cf. THEY an.—vs (incl.). 
THEY an.—ws (incl.) agreement with C. 
THEY an.—yovu agreement with C., F., D. 
THEY an.—HIM agreement with C., F. 
THEY an.—THEM an. agreement with C., F. 
THEY an.—iT agreement with C., F., P. 
THEY aN.—THEM inan. agreement with C., F., P. 
Where all agree with or without phonetic changes, no record has 
been made. In certain cases it is impossible to be sure whether 
phonetic changes have not disguised agreements. 
THEY inan., intrans., looks strange as contrasted with the common 
Central Algonquian form (on the Cree correspondent, see p. 244) ; how- 
ever, it is merely because the word from which it is taken chances 
to have a vowel before the termination, and not a consonant. The 
same is to be observed in Kickapoo, and doubtless other dialects; 
thus Kickapoo tetepydan’, 1. e., tetepyawan’ (see p. 258) THEY inan. ARE 
ROUND (analysis: tetepi CIRCLE, initial stem; -d- secondary connective 
stem, inan. copula; -wan!’ termination of the third person inan. pl. 
intrans. independent mode after a vowel as contrasted with -dni 
after a consonant). [Note -niwan* in Fox as compared with -on', the 
ordinary termination of the third person pl. nan. intrans. independ- 
ent mode; see Handbook of American Indian Languages (Bull. 40, 
B. A. E.), pt. 1, p. 833.] 
It should be specially noted that Menominee, Cree, and Fox 
agree in having the objective forms of rr and THEM inan. expressed 
by a single form as opposed to Ottawa, Algonkin, Ojibwa, and 
Shawnee. It is a common Algonquian feature that in subordinate 
modes the forms are expressed by single pronouns. 
A table for the subjunctive mode is not available; however, the 
writer can give some information concerning the relations indicated 
