1 6 Charles E. Bennett, 



3. On the I of the Karedicrav (= Att. Karedeaav) CoLL. 

 20, 2, see below, under Conjugation, § 32, 5. 



8. 



Where it occurs, i corresponds to primitive Greek r and 

 to I of the other dialects; e.g. b^ayuovticoi Coll. 151 ; 179; 

 'E;^eTi/xwi/ 38, 2 ; @eoTtfji(ov 42 ; hc<i Bezz. Beitr., xi., p. 316; 

 wIOl Coll. 135. 



1. IpMVi Coll. 60, 8; 31, if correct and to be connected 

 with (6/30? in the sense of 'consecrated district,' probably 

 had I, which must be explained in the same way as the per- 

 plexing Homeric Ipo^, Lesbian Zpo?. Osthoff {MorpJiologische 

 Untersiichnngen, iv., p. 151) assumes ^icr-po'^ for the original 

 form, as otherwise it is impossible to account for the i in Les- 

 bian ; a primitive *lap6^ would have given *lppo<i in that 

 dialect. 



Ahrens {Philologiis, xxxv., p. 42) reads the i with the pre- 

 ceding Tft), i.e. rwi pcovi, or according to his principles rot 

 pcdvi {rol locative ; see below, § 27, 3) 'in the plain.' 



2. (j)l8(i)\6<; is Deecke's reading in Coll. 126, 3 for (j^eiSco- 

 X09. But the change of primitive n to .1 in Cyprian is alto- 

 gether improbable, since ei whether original or of secondary 

 origin is elsewhere retained; e.g. ireicrei Coll. 60, 12, 25; 

 feret 59, I ; 60, I ; erei ^6, I ; aipel 60, 31 ; 'AireiXcov Berl. 

 Phil. WocJi., 1886, No. 42, col. 1323. Moreover, one or two 

 of the characters of which the word consists are quite uncer- 

 tain. 



9. 



Cyprian ij corresponds in general to primitive Greek v and 

 to vi of the other dialects ; e.g. kirkrv^e Coll. 59, 4 ; Kapv^ 

 65, I ; avv 60, 28 ; apyvpo) 60, 6, et pass. 



1. Bvpdvoi (for hv-dv-oi, with parasitic p, see § 17, 2) Coll, 

 60, 6 seems to be from the root 8u- 'give,' seen in Lat. du-im, 



146 



