Zool.— Vol. I.] MILLER— GREEK AND LATIN DERIVATIVES. 141 



(5) and (6) irevre and e% follow the analogy of 

 rerpa- and e7rrd, and make prefixes irevra- and ir- 

 respectively: ire vra - Sd/CTuXos, five-fingered; ej;a- 

 8d/cTv\o<;, six-fingered. 



(7) kirrd, oktco, etc., are simply prefixed without 

 change. 



72 Note. — Tidv in composition is usually treated as a neuter 



substantive, with stem irav- instead of 7ravr-,in an adverbial 

 relation to the other member of the compound: e. g. irdv- 

 ao<f)o<i, all-wise, ir a v- creX.^i'o?, full-mooned ; 7r dp, -[i-qvos, 

 through all the month; II a v -eX\r]ve<; , the Grecian world; 

 rarely iravr-o- : it a v t - o -8cnr6<; , all sorts of ; iravr-o -iropoi, 

 all-traversed. 



74 



n 

 ■3 



S ( ■ ° ) ■ if o . « 



73 4. at/*- o'- ppo- 0- s,fiowiug with blood ; 



T07ro- <ypd(j>- o- 9, place-describing ; 



\l8o- (f>dy- 0- 9, stone-eating; 



ovpavo- ctkott- o- 9, sky-gazing; 



Ppayxio- crrey- o- 9, gill-covered. 



u 



u 





( 



Connei 

 Case-e: 





d- 



TpOTT- 





0- 9, 



«<?/ turning; 



dvd- 



PXeir- 





?, 



i. e. /3\ei/r, looking up; 



ev- 



rpocp- 





0- 9, 



living with ; 



a- 



TOfJ,- 





0- 9, 



uncut ; 



$LX°~ 



TOfl- 





0- 9, 



cut in two. 



Exceptions to these rules will be found, of course, not 

 only in scientific nomenclature, but even in well approved 

 classics. All that has been attempted here has been to give 



