70 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY [BULL. 72 
before -‘ki of the conjunctive: @ina@%tci’megwa‘ki ‘‘as they (inan.) 
have been narrated,”’ 66.5. 
(d) An anomalous third person singular animate of the future 
tense conjunctive mode, independent passive, is to be found in 
wri cia cime sinemi’namegi ‘‘that he will thus be benefited,” 52.41. 
It was impossible to obtain a full series by questions based on this. 
Certainly -inamegi is related in some way to -amegi, the third per- 
son inanimate singular, conjunctive mode of the indefinite passive. 
(e) A novel interrogative mode of the indefinite passive is wi- 
‘anemia cigé nina peme’nigdn™ ‘‘whether I shall continue to be taken 
care of,” 46.1. It was possible to obtain a fragmentary series based 
on -igin™*, . 
(f) The third person of a potential subjunctive of the indefinite 
passive is found a few times. The characteristic ending seems to be 
-né‘4*, but I do not fully understand the formation. See 32.17, 
32.35, 34.13, 58.22. The same forms occur in some of my unpublished 
texts obtained years ago, but they are extremely isolated. 
(g) A novel indefinite passive -dweniwi- occurs a couple of 
times: dndwe’niwita ‘“‘the one mentioned,” 42.13; wtanemipeme- 
pemendiweniwa’ ‘iyan™ [with -wdé'7- rhetorically for -wi-] ‘‘T shall con- 
tinue to be taken care of,’’ 46.2. The same formation occurs in an 
unpublished text of mine: a‘*kawdpawent’wwa%te ‘‘they (an.) were 
watched.” 
(h) Examples of participials of the imdefinite passive are to be 
found at 26.35, 26.38. They bear the same relation to the conjunc- 
tive mode of the indefinite passive as the ordinary participial to the 
ordinary conjunctive. 
§44. The independent pronoun of the first person singular, nina, 
in combination with -megoni (see below) means ‘‘my very own”: 
see 46.20. ‘ 
(a) A new demonstrative pronoun, @’wa‘im(a), is found at 36.35. 
With this pronoun a person’s name must be given. ‘‘So-and-so’’ 
is an approximate translation. 
(b) Another novel demonstrative, 7/nén4 ‘‘the very one” (animate 
smgular) occurs at 42.2, 44.31, etc. 
(c) The combination ininimegd’nin(i) ‘‘the very same”’ (inan. pl.) 
is met at 66.5. Observe both members of the compound are inflected. 
The animate plural, inigimegonigi, does not chance to occur in the 
text. With the posterior member of the compound compare nina- 
megoni: see above. 
(d) An isolated word windnig(@), at 36.39, “‘her (his) people” 
evidently in some way belongs to the demonstratives as shown by the 
animate plural ending -igi, not nominal -agi. Itis a contraction of 
wina and %nigi. 
