bave lieen coeval w^itJi the h&mnmng of human speech. [See App. Fatlier^ 

 Mather]. In some fdmilie»;,liDwever, m is mas*;,, (md b &c. fern. [vSee 

 Dnndriiin Camp, Voc, App. to chap V]. 



Tlie TitHitai> tui math U probably comiocted with the Scythic masculine 

 rswt of the same foimp generic words for the spedeA being geuei-olly cog-^ 

 iisUe with masc. and not with fern, roots. Ugrmn hus mia, mes^ maz, man 

 fiir husband^ man. 



The peculiar Thochu words m FatJuT, ou Mother^ are Sc}thic,— ai i?'a- 

 ^Arr ll^rian, am Mtdfm^ Turkish. 



The Chmc^ nu^ men, na, wouum^femde, docs not appear to occur 12 the 

 Tibetan vocabularies, but it Laa beeii received iiito several of the Ultraiu- 

 dian, Gerard hoT\*ever ipve^s arie Bhotian. 



The Obiue^e fern, t-ii, Xs^z (contined to Uird^s in Kw^-hwa) is found itt 

 Ilarpu fi'-me (firlj tpd is common in the soatU. 



Masculixe Names. 



1. The Labial Boot 



inau DtAJe Chin. K-h,_ ib. {mUk)j K-U 

 ill ' JiitluTf husbaiui K-t., K-lu 

 {jhUf pu „ Auarn 



phu4 mun (vir), hu^bemdj Siain. 

 pho, po f^ttt^' Bhot. tip. 



plia, pa, J'utheTy male Bhot. wr. 

 pa- Itt J'tUher Bh.wp. 



a-pa „ Bhot. wr., Horpa, Ufanyalc, Takpa, Lhopsj Mumi, 

 Kapwi, MarajU; N. Tang^kJiuI, Muthaii, Joboka; Moti, 

 iffl-pe Gyaruutj^. 



pOj pho father l^m fam. 

 ^-[juk J, Kanibojan. 



tt-po 1^ lUozome .^Jig-auii. 



tf-pu ,^ Hony-pu, Xoreug-, Tengsa^ Angami. 



i-bo „ Cham ph ting, 



b« „ Kbyeng, 



jfe^i-bu Abor, 



«-bu „ iVett''ar. 



rt-bo „ Lepehfly Gunrng', 



(A(3«^/-po viak Chaiigfio. 



sbig-]sho 'man Smg-pho. 



pon]^ imlt: {an,) Aamsang-, wa-pong put, ujiele, Mijbu. 



4-pho bfvt/wr „ 



poh Kuini. 



/«a-phu mule {an.) Siam 



wa faiiier Siiigpho. 



va „ Jiii, ^ara^ang, Dhimal. 

 _ pA „ Sgau Karen, S.Taugkhul, Koibu, Mru, Kasia, Chepan^, 

 u-pa „ ^op*utig. 

 o-|>a „ C. I'aiigKhvl, Tablung. 

 0"^«ii „ Muluug". 



t 



