1853.] On the Mongolian Affinities of the Caucasians. 



59 



Stone. — D6-r in Osetic. 

 r Do in Tibetan. 



Doh in Lhopa. 

 Doh in Serpa* 



Diin-ga in Khas. 



Stone. — L6-di in Georgian. 

 Lti-n in Khyeng. 

 Lti-ng in Limbu. 

 Ta-lii-n in Sak. 

 L6-ng in Lepcha. 

 Ka-lu-n in Kami. 



Great. — Di-di in Georgian, 

 Di-di in Mingrelian. 



Di in Tai. 

 Ge-de-t in Bodo. 



Da in Kuanchua. 

 Da-i in Anam. 

 Da in Pie. 



f Note again how the suffixed and pre- 

 J fixed serviles tally, the root (Do) 

 | being here indubitable. So Tsari 

 I ehi-m and Jili m-chi, voce water. 



ga, suffix, and annectant n, both 

 servile. 



Eoot is L6, Lii. The serviles have 

 been too frequently remarked on, 

 to need repetition. But note 

 well how congruous they are 

 ab initio usque ad finem ! 



i 



f Eoot repeated, as in Cho-cho, Pye- 

 \ pye, &c. &c. 



!Ge, the ga prefix euphonised : t, 

 conjunct ta. 



i final, servile. 



ta-Dhi in INewari. 



ta, the common prefix and dhi, the 

 aspirate form of the root, as Mhe 

 for Me, &c. 



Three. — Sami in Georgian. 

 Sami in Mingrelian. 

 Jum in Lazic. 



Sum, Shum, Sam, Song, San, Tham, Turn, in all the Tibeto-Hi- 

 malayan and Indo-Chinese tongues. 



Four. — p Si in Circassian, 

 p Shi in Abassian. 

 b Zhi in Tibetan. 

 Zhi in Lhopa. 

 Zhyi in Serpa. 



Si, Si-ku in Gyami. 



t' si in Siamese. 

 t' se in Shan. 



Si in Tai. 



Five. — Chii-ba in Circassian 

 Pat-chu in Talien. 



C Both root and servile are identical 

 | in all five words ; another marvel- 

 j lous instance of concord, capable, 

 like the rest, of only one expla- 

 nation. 

 Intercalate y, as in the nouns. 



Kii, a servile. 



f t', servile : the common ta particle, 

 \ conjunct. 



The nude root. 



{ 



Chti, the root. Pat, a double ser- 

 vile as in the Pasuko word for 

 hand. 



I 2 



