1858.] Bdhing Vocabulary. 413 



Indicative Mood. 

 Present and Future Tense. 

 First person. 

 Singular. Dual. Plural. 



j, . , Jas-cha, incl. Jasiya, incl, 



Jas-chuku, excl. Jasika, excl. 



Second person. 



Jase. Jas-chi. Jasini. 



Third person. 



Jase. Jas-che. Jasime. 



Preterite Tense. 



First person. 



j astl - f Jastasa. incl. ( Jastayo, incl. 



\ Jastasuku, excl. ( Jastako, excl. 



Second person. 

 Jaste. Jastasi. Jastani. 



Third person. 

 Jasta. Jastasa. Jastarae. 



Infinitive Mood. 



Jascho, to eat, or to have eaten one's self, aoristic. 



Participles. 



1st. — Paktictple oe the Agent, impersonal. 



Jasiba, the self-eater, one who eats, or will eat or ate himself, aoristic. 



2nd. — Participle of the Object and Instrument. 

 Present and Future Time. 

 Impersonal Form. 

 Jaschome, his own that any one eats or will eat, self eatable, what is self eaten 

 or wherewith to eat self. 



3rd. — Same Participle oe time past, impersonal. 



Jasina, his own (flesh) that any one ate, or what has been self eaten by any one; 

 and wherewith it has been self eaten* or his own (teeth) wherewith any one ate. 



4th. — Impersonated equivalent oe Participle 2nd in Chome. 



First person- 

 Singular. Dual. Plural. 



Jasigname, my own that J Jaschame, incl. f Jasiyame, incl. 



I eat or eat with. |_ Jaschukume, excl. \ Jasikame, excl. 



* The participles in cho-me and in na are scarcely useable in derivative verbs 

 in "so" like Jaso, but more freely in primitives of the same formation such as 

 waso = caco, e.g., was-chome khli voidable ordure, and wasiua khli = voided 

 ordure, that is, the ordure which will be and has been, voided. This shows the 

 passive bent of these participles and the affinity of neuter verbs to passives. See 

 Classification of Verbs. 



