712 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY [bull. 40 



Here belong also the following Chukchee forms: 



En'Tce'kin belonging there 



fien'lcu'lcin belonging there (farther on) 



raEnqofken belonging there (not very far, midway to) 



vaEnqa'lzen belonging there (behind the person addressed) 



fiotinqa'lcen belonging there (behind the speaker) 



Such Koryak forms as minka'Mla^n belonging to what country 

 (Kor. 40.7), ganka'Tcila^n belonging to that country (Kor. 40.7), 

 combine two suffixes, -fc^w, and-Za^^i, and refer to persons. 



Temporal adverbs also take this suffix. 



Numeral predicates with the ending -Tcin express ordinal numbers. 

 TiiiLinTcmi'Tcen, or miLinka'ulin the fifth 



§ 48. SUFFIX -lin 



-lin (Kor. Kam. Ja^fi) (oblique cases formed from -I, Kor. -I) 

 expresses the measure of a quality. 



minJce'mil ge'tvulin what likeness strong? (i. e., how strong?); 

 Kor. Kam. Tneiike'Tnit qa'tvula^n\ Kor. Par. rnenke'mis' 

 ge'tvula^n 



e7i'lce'mil gitte'pilium that likeness I am sensible (i. e., I am so 

 sensible) {en'lce that; -ium [§73]) 



With the prefix ge,- it indicates the possessor of an object. 

 ^e — lin (Chukchee), ga — lin (Kor. Kam). This is identical with the 

 verbal forms given in § 73. It expresses possession. 



ga-qa' a-len (Kor. Kam. ga-qgya' -len) he who has reindeer 

 g-ekke'-lhi (Kor. Kam. g-akka'-Jin) he who has sons 

 garai' -git thoa who hast a home 89.7 (see §73). 

 ga-pela'-i-gUm I have left 

 ga-qaa' -i-gum I who have reindeer. 

 Koryak: 



gavagnina'len with, nails Kor. 24.2 



gaLa'Un with eyes Kor, 24.2 



