152 JOCHELSON 



120. Omo' ce-boii (something good), verbal noun (see § 112, 

 Oino' ce see 56). 



121. Li'jinide, from le'n (to eat), base of the transitive verb ; 

 and nidi\ conditional mode (see § ^y). 



122. Locib (fire); ge, the locative (see § 12). 



123. Pe' dc-te-nain. Pe'de (to burn), base of the intransitive 

 verb ; te changes the verb into a transitive verb (to singe), see 

 117; nam. See 1 6. 



124. Pu'dedegen. See 109. It is equivalent to ''over it" 

 (the fire). 



125. Tabu' ngelc (it; that is, the idol). See 59. 



126. Ta. See 84. 



127. Mo' i-numi-nam. i1/<?/(hold, keep), base of the transitive 

 verb ; nunu, suffix of the intensive-iterative (see § 104) ; nam. 

 See 16. 



128. Ta'nde. See 39. 



129. Me-legt te-nam. Me, see § 107 ; Icgi'te (to feed), from 

 the transitive verb Ic'ii (to eat) ; nam, see 16. 



130. Ka'cnei (every), from the Russian ka'shdy. To use 

 the Yukaghir expression, it should h^ le'fide-o'nmun (see § 57), 

 instead oi ka' cnei le'ndelge. 



131. Le'ndel-ge. Le'nde (to eat, in general), intransitive verb, 

 formed from the transitive verb le' u (eat) by means of the suf- 

 fix de (see § ;/) ; /' is the suffix of the verbal noun (see §§ 82, 

 83) ; ge, the locative (see § 12). 



132. Tat. See 23. 



133. A' -nam. See 79. 



134. Tabu'de. See Ji and 75. 



135. Xo'hreni. See 75. 



