The Personal Pronouns. 11' 



Eromangan, himi 

 Fotunese, akaua 

 Tagala, kayu 

 Fate, egu 

 Duauru, inggu 



Verbal Pronoun. 

 Fate, ku Heb. &c., t-u 



Fate, tu (in Inclusive) Mod. Arabic, tu 



Malay, kamu (Sep. Pron.) Eth., kemu 



Heb., tern 



Nominal Suffix. 



Malay, kamu Etbiopic, ke7?iu 



Fate, kam Heb., kem 



(Often contracted in Arb., kuni 



Malay, Fate, &c., to mu, 

 ona, m, and used for 

 singular like English 

 your) 



22. The Inclusive. 



Malay, Hto, (/a I, to Thou) For ki I, and ta (ka), Thou, 



Fate, akit see §§ 18, 20 



Fotuna, akita 



Malagasy, isikia (is-ikia, 



see § 9) 

 Bauro, gia 

 Ambrym, kenga (for keka) 



This combination is found as in all languages so in the 

 Shemitic. See Caussin de Percival, Grammaire Arabe 

 Vulgaire, § 223, who gives these two forms of it : " ana ou 

 ente'' and "ana on eyyak," I and Thou — that is, ana I, ou 

 (pronounced ^t), and ente (enta) or eyyak {eyja^k), Thou. 

 Now note (a) that the and is vulgarly left out in Oceanic,, 

 and (6) that ente or enta as it drops the n, for instance, in 

 Hebrew, so in Oceanic this nt is t The n is mere emphatic 

 prefixed to t the pronoun. 



Santo, nitsi, inti Arabic, ana {ou en)te 



Aneiteum, inta (verbal 



pronoun) 

 Mall., anre (for ante), as For m, I, see § 18 



Fate dialect, igira for 



igita^ 



