PRONOUNS. 17 
COMPOUND PRONOUNS. 
§ 24. These are ‘éi,’ ‘kidi,’ and ‘ iéi.’ 
1. The double pronoun ‘4G,’ combines the subjective Z and the ob- 
jective you; as, wastecidaka, I love you, from wastedaka. (See § 20.) 
2. The form ‘kid,’ when a double pronoun, is reciprocal, and requires 
the verb to have the plural ending; as, wasteki¢idapi, they love each other. 
But sometimes it is a preposition with and to: miéi hi, he came with me. The 
Titoyway say kiGi waki, [ came with him. 
3. The reflexive pronouns are used when the agent and patient are the 
same person; as, wasteididaka, he loves himself, wasteni¢idaka, thou lovest 
thyself, wastemi¢idaka, I love myself. 
The forms of these pronouns are as follows :— 
Sing. Dual. Plur, 
a fiGh i¢i-pi 
2. ni¢i niéi-pi 
1. midi unkidi unki¢i-pi. 
RELATIVE PRONOUNS. 
§ 25. 1. The relative pronouns are tuwe, who, and taku, what; tuwe 
kasta and tuwe kakes, whosoever or anyone; taku kasta and taku kakes, 
whatsoever or any thing. In the Titonway and Ihayktoywan dialects ‘tuwa’ 
is used for tuwe, both as relative and interrogative. 
2. Tuwe and taku are sometimes used independently in the manner of 
nouns: as, tuwe u, some one comes; taku yamni waymdaka, I see three things. 
3. They are also used with ‘day’ suffixed and ‘sni’ following: as, 
tuweday sni, vo one; takuday mduhe sni, J have not anything; tukteday uy 
Sni, it is nowhere; wymana eGoypi smi, neither did tt. 
INTERROGATIVE PRONOUNS. 
§ 26. These are tuwe, who? with its plural tuwepi; taku, what? which 
is used with the plural signification, both with and without the termination 
‘pi;’ tukte, which? tuwe tawa, whose? tona, tonaka, and tonakeéa, how many? 
DEMONSTRATIVE PRONOUNS. 
§ 27. 1. These are de, this, and he, that, with their plurals dena, these, 
and hena, those; also, ka, that, and kana, those or so many. From these are 
formed denaka and denakeéa, these many; henaka and henakeéa, those many ; 
and kanaka and kanakeéa, so many as those. 
7105—VOL Ix 

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