494 FOX MORTUARY CUSTOMS AND BELIEFS. (ETH. ANN. 40. 
to be so, 448.28; pwawimegu-kiigo 1-1 cine’ ckimagani’witcig*'* those 
who were forbidden nothing, 414.39-40. 
(d) Corresponding to the indefinite passive conjunctive mode, third 
person animate in -e‘tci there is a past subjunctive in -ete'e; as 
the forms have, however, the force of indicatives, i‘- is used: 
ii‘wiipiwene’te’e he began to be led, 386.27; a i'ciwi"tciwe’te'®* he 
was made to go with them in that direction, 386.27—28; i‘ine’te’®’ he 
was told, 390.34. 
(e) The third person of a potential subjunctive of the indefinite 
passive in -eni'a (and -unii'a) is found a few times: tcagi 
wetowendi a’megu it all indeed would be taken, 434.30; awita’megu 
kigo’* a‘ckwiweta’wuna'“* nothing might be saved from being taken, 
434.3132 (see 434.33); i/neni‘“ ‘he might (would) be told, 442.40 
(see too 444.20-21, and paragraph 10 above); i‘ci’menii‘“* he might 
(would) be just told that, 442.40; a‘ci'tawuni'a’-megu they might 
be made for him [free translation], 444.9; ete. 
(f) Corresponding to -me“tci of the conjunctive of the indefinite 
passive and -mete of the subjunctive of the same, with obviatives 
as subjects (see Bull. 72, B. A. E., p. 69), there is an obviative par- 
ticipial in -me*tcini: pigine’me“tcin™ the one released, 384.9 
(zg) There is an indefinite passive of the third person animate 
singular ending in -atiini for the conjunctive mode and -atina for the 
participial: a’ciwe’natin("!) wherever he is led, 468.25; ne‘ki’megu 
pwawipagi'se’natin™ as long as he is not released, 486.14; ii‘ce'ki’- 
‘atiin("™“*) whoever is adopted, 482.11. Obviously ami‘a‘ckwiweto’- 
watin™' they would be able to save it, 434.3, is a form with the instru- 
mental -taw- for inanimate object, followed by the ordinary intransi- 
tive verbal pronoun. Now -watiini clearly contains the element 
-wa- contained in -wiate (sing. -te), -wa'sa (sing. -‘sa), etc.; and so 
must be allied to -tini. Unfortunately I have not been able to con- 
struct a complete series of pronouns for this series. It may be added 
the -atiini passive occurs in Jones’s Fox Texts also. The word 
jinemawa’tiiin™ at 404.9 is clearly a participial and an obviative; 
it seems active in voice, but this is not absolutely certain. The termi- 
nation is allied to -watini, and in fact would seem to be the corres- 
pondent to an ending -awatiini which last I can not as yet substan- 
tiate. 
(h) The indefinite passive in -iweniwi- is to be found in dniwe’- 
niwit** (404.11) the one so called; see Bull. 72, B. A. E., p. 70. Note 
also ina“teiméweniwiwa such is the report concerning him, etc.: see 
392.19; 476.7-8; 476.8-9; 476.14; 476.23. 
(i) I have spoken of the indefinite passive conjunctive in -wetci 
and the corresponding subjunctive in -wete in Bull. 72, B. A. E., p. 71. 
An example in the texts of the present paper is kigii’nowete (456.30) 
if a gens festival was given. See also 468.31. Observe that we have 
