136 



JOCHELSON 



a}dn' early. 



tudd' long ago. 



ic long. 



xo'nlume, xo' llimie immediately. 



we' xanin never. 



xa! die already. 



a'nnutne at first. 



ke'yot^ at first. 

 keye'n previously. 

 druk^ (suddenly, the Russian 

 word vdrug) . 



§ 1 19. Adverbs of place : 



/d there, thither. 



// here. 



x(?/i where, whither. 



xof where from, whence. 



xo' dibonget^ whence. 



xo'nde eyerywhere, anywhere. 



tap thence. 



§ 1 20. Adverbs of manner : 



o' moc well. 



como'n very. 



71' a' dude enough, only. 



ta'ndaga enough. 



tat, ta'cile afterwards, later on. 

 ne'gajiye yesterday. 

 ogo'iye to-morrow. 



ta'nnugi then. 



/y/now. 



ai again, once more, anew. 



Ta' bu7i-ni' nin-gielgc meanwhile, in 



the mean time. 

 ni'nelije many times. 

 xa'inlije several times. 



iher elsewhere. 



migi' de hither. 



tinide this way. 



cai'rude sideways. 



pude outside. 



wacin against, opposite. 



///' hence, from here. 



ki'juoii' easily, lightly. 

 iiige'yot heavily. 

 i'rkin only. 



§ 121. All adverbs directly precede the verb, and may be re- 

 garded as prefixes. Not all adverbs to be found in the lan- 

 guage have been enumerated here. Some adverbs are simply 

 roots, for instance, ta, ti. Others are derived from these roots, 

 for instance, tat' tif (" thence," *' hence "), which are the ablative 

 of ta and ti. Others are formed from nouns and adverbs, as, 

 for instance, ?r''<2aV/ (*' opposite "), an abbreviation of iv' acefiin 

 (dative of wa' ce, " face "); i'rkin (** only ") is merely the numeral 

 one ; como'n' (''very"), from coma, which is the basis of the in- 

 transitive verb to he large. 



§ 122. The temporal case of nouns, mentioned under nouns, 

 is also to be added to the adverbs of time (§§ 12, 31). 



