286 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY [bull. 40 



Page 



§§ 35-38. Reduplication 365 



§ 35. General lemarks 365 



§ 36. Initial reduplication, including the first consonant following 



the first vowel 365 



§ 37. Initial reduplication, including the first vowel 371 



§ 38. Reduplication of words containing proclitic particles 373 



§ 39. Modification of stem vowel 373 



§§ 40-47. Formation of plural 373 



§ 40. Methods of forming the plural 373 



§ 41. First group. Singular and plural the same 374 



§ 42. Second and third groups. Plurals formed by reduplication and 



vowel change 375 



§ 43. Fourth group. Plurals formed by the prefix qa- 377 



§44. Fifthgroup. Plurals formed by the prefix 7a- and the suffix -(^)/i«. 379 



§ 45. Sixth group. Plurals formed by the prefix I- 380* 



§46. Seventh group. Irregular plurals 381 



§ 47. Plurals of compounds 383 



§§ 48-54. Personal pronouns 383 



§ 48. Subjective and objective pronoinis 383 



§ 49. Use of the subjective 384 



§ 50. Use of the objective 386 



§ 51. The first person singular, objective pronoun 387 



§ 52. Remarks on the subjective pronouns 388 



§ 53. The personal pronoun in the Nass dialect 389 



§ 54. Independent personal pronoun 391 



§ 55. Possession 392 



§ 56. Demonstrative pronouns. 393 



§ § 57-58. Numerals 396 



§ 57. Cardinal numbers 396 



§ 58. Ordinal numbers, numeral adverbs, and distributive numbers.. 398 



§§ 59-65. Syntactic use of the verb 399 



§ 59. Use of subjunctive after temporal particles 399 



§ 60. Use of subjunctive in the negative 403 



§ 61. The subjunctive after conjunctions. 403 



§ 62. Use of the indicative 404 



§ 63. The negative 404 



§ 64. The interrogative 405 



§ 65. The imperative 406 



§ 66. Subordinating conjunctions 408 



§ 67. Preposition 410 



Texts 414 



