E, B. Shaw— On the Ghakhak Languages. 



[No, 2, 



VOOABTJLAEY, 



A, Wahhi: 



fco be able . . # karsar~an 



karsar-am 

 karkogn-am 

 karkakbk 



above, over (postposition) tsa - — ~ wucb-an 



above, up (adv.) 

 to abuse 



to accompany 



account, number 



on account of 



accoutrements 



acute (metaph.) 



an adze 



ill advised, who will not 



take counsel . nazakbbt 



to affect, to stain, to profit nadhevs-an 

 nadbevs-am 



wuch . 



varencUak 



vdrandUam 



varatam 



varendetk 



kamtu watsn 



asab 



~— jinib 



asbab . 



tiz 



wajak . 



to be afraid, to fear 



afresh 

 after (p. p.) 



nadhevd-am 



nadhafk 



washuk-an 



wasbi-am 



washt-am 



wusbeth 



tsa-sar-an 



tsa an sibas 



tsa sibas — • an 

 afterwards, behind (adv.) tsibas 

 again, moreover, also other waz 

 age (years) . . B 41 



aged, old . . . khhiar 



T. 



BarikoK 



. az — ter, — az ter 



, ter 



. randUao 



. ran-am 



.- rand-am 



. randj 



W. kamtii set-ao T. S. 



• asub A. 



. — — ivon 



P. asbab p. 



P. teiz R 



- wajak 



naghukht 



imdbevd-ao 



nadhivs-am, nadh^avs~t 



nadhevd-am 



nadhevdj 



khuj dheigao 



— dhor-am 



— dhaug^am 

 dhaugj 



4 



m kar 



az 



• az zabo 

 — - zabo 



zabo 

 P. wuz 



P. sal 

 P. pir 



P. 

 P. 



* The four words in each dialect opposite each English verb, are the four forms 

 required to be known in order to conjugate the verb, viz. the Eoot or Infinitive Form, 

 the Present, the Past, and the Perfect. Where there are two forms in the second place, 

 the latter of the two is the 3rd Person Singular, 



B 





