; indeclinable. Tt is generally compared by the help of such 



'><>'L iind s(j OH according to the particular attribute. 



Witli tlic exception of the iiiterrogatives enumerated already, 

 nd a few ;id verbs of place terminating in '-ni' and '-na' the adverb 

 as no phonic index. Those in '-ni ' and '-na " inay be regarded 



; rarely, ' nga ' answers for and, and if I mistake not another 

 lode of uniting ideas is to sustain considerably longer tlian usual 



or bulla kira bulla funr. The enumeration may he conducted 



higher after tlu> same manner, but generally numbers above four 



are expi'essed by 'gurwinda' or ' bonggan ' lunaij. 



Thr V>rh. 



The\erbhas \ari(ms forms a^ ^'///v'/'^ liy i r'-nenl. C,n,.nf,r, 



^vor(l' fnmi"the"sTmple\'orn). Althou-li remil.n- ex.imi.lr. n,a> be 



moods aie distinguishable with well-marked terminations. The 

 iiitinitive and indicative may however be said to overlap. Tense 



serving on occasions for present, past, and future time. There 

 is a clearly ma.ked preterite which is ^^^^ '^ P^^'^f ';^^^P^j'"^''^JjJ^ 

 iiitinitive se'rves as impJrf(."c't pa'rticiple, and there is also a verbal 

 noun. The shortest and simplest form is the ^"''P^^'^'^^J'J;^^^.^ J^^lX 



verbal notion is't^pressed by the" infinitive index which i.uMmlly 

 '-'"an; '-mathi.' or '-thin.' Some verbs may have an '•^♦"^itnjMn 

 two of thesrendin-s, thn. there i. 'yanmnn '"ul x.mmathi to 





to be inferred or the jironoun i 

 Conjugation is by Jiieans of pr 

 lied iniixes. The prefixes gen 



