Ixxxil Appendix: — Proceedings of 



f>£ form, v and w; and the changes on these forms to constitute 

 alphabetic characters, are also for the most part made on 

 uniform principles. 



The following Table will shew the progressive developement 

 of the two elementary particles above described, to form 

 alphabetic eharacters. 



Table I. 





Branch I. 







Branch II. 



© 



0 



9 





a 





ta 



wa 



cha 



ma 



dha 



da a ngm 





e 



t9 





& 



m 



tha 



pha 



e 





tha 



dha 



CO 



'<£> 











ga 



ha 



bha 









c© 













sa 

















d 





C3 



es © 



pa 





chha 



sha 



ga 



sa gha 



In the preceding Table we 



have 24 - 



alphabetic characters?, 



namely. 













2 vowels, e and o. 



3 gutturals, ga, its aspirate gha and the nasal nga, 



3 palatals, and its aspirate chha andja. 



4 linguals, to and rfa 3 and their respective aspirates tha and dha* 

 2 dentals, tha and dha. 



4 labials, pa, and its aspirate pha, bha and ma. 



2 semivowels, ica and ga. 



3 sibilants, s/z& dental, or sa palatal, and sa dental, and the 

 aspirate ha. 



"What therefore we have yet wanting are the remaining 

 vowels a, i, e, and u, the guttural ha, and its aspirative kha 9 

 the aspirated palatal jha, the dentals ta and da, the labial ha, 

 the nasals lingual na and dental na, and the semivowels r& 

 and la. These will be found in Table II. which is separated 

 into divisions that might indeed have formed separate tables, 

 there being no common source from whence they may all be 

 derived. 



