BOAS] HANDBOOK OF INDIAN LANGUAGES SIUSLAWAN 577 



It will be noticed that the subjective suffixes empIo3^ed in the forma- 

 tion of the corresponding dual and plural persons are added after the 

 adverbial -tc^ a trait which Siuslaw has in common with the Alsea 

 language. The objective pronouns for the third persons have as 

 their basis the corresponding forms of the demonstrative pronoun. 



For the sake of emphasis the subjective suffixed pronouns are some- 

 times used in addition to the independent forms. 



Examples of subjective pronouns: 



no! Kan HntslL.'^ya's I have an arrow (literally, I am the one who 

 [1] is arrow-having) 50.16 



a'tsan tE naL/oxa'xam, that's why this I was sent 21.8 



na'han a'nts^nx st'n^xyuts I am that one whom 3"0u wanted 40.14 



Tcumt'ntcin na nictcl'tc wa'aH not I anything will say (literally, not 

 I, 1 am the one who anything will say) 74.9 



IcHxof na alone (was) 1 100.3 



nlxHs H^nx qanl'nal hl'nlsUl you'll take along yonv knife (liter- 

 ally, you are the one, you, knife take along will, yours) 50.16, 

 17 



nxxHs lH!a^' you are eating 



H s^apElVtcHux and he will be first 10.1 



nans hl'sa we two (inch) are well 



na^'xiln xafts.'u we two (excl.) are two 36.15 



s^a^x ata's L.'xu'ywi they two only knew it 08.9 



s'^anx tsl'k/ya L.'xvfyun they very (well) know it 72.1, 2 



Examples of objective pronouns: 

 kumt'ntG Wsa natc it is not good for me 12.2 

 Hnx natc lI'vjis then you shall come to me 44.6 

 Tcuimfntc Wsanl'xHc it (does) not (look) good on you 12.5 

 Tcuiat'ntc na'tc^ns si'n^xya tE qlutcu'nt not us two (incl.) like 

 these women 52.13 



Examples of objective and discriminative pronouns for the third 

 persons will be found under "Demonstrative Pronouns" (see § 115), 

 while the discriminative pronouns for the first and second persons 

 have been illustrated in § 21. 



§ 114:, The Possessive Pronouns 



The independent possessive pronouns are compound forms con- 

 sisting of the following three separate elements: the independent 

 personal pronoun (see § 113), the relative case-ending -Einl (see § 87), 

 3045°— Bull. 40, pt 2— 12 37 § 114 



