TEMA^SHIGHT VOCABULARY— VERBS. 589 
95. Bring me something, auyoheet 
harret. 
/ bring it to you, waueghakit. 
I leave, let, nek 5jagh. 
Let him go (ivalk), eyit erregesh. 
96. / set free a slave, sidderfagh 
akeli. 
A freed slave, akeli nellil. 
A freedman, aderif. 
/ divorce a woman, ezimmizeagh 
tamatBo 
I marry, itidibonagh. 
He has divorced his former wife, 
izimmaze hannis, tadagh roris 
tille \^quce ei eraf^. 
(And) has married a yomig girl, 
awe taliad andtirret. (On awe, 
see 95.) 
a pronoun : edrus, a little of it. See also 
endurret, in 96., for young. 
95. In Kab., awld, bring to me hither ; 
yuwi, he brought, led.* Auyohi must be 
formed of auwi, bring ; dhi, to me. In 96., 
awe (^=yuwi) duxit, for married. 
Oyagh is a different verb, imperative. 
Eyyi, let, leave ; in Kab., ejji. 
96. Nellil, freed, from alii, free. A root 
of very like sound is in 105., and another 
in 50. Izimiz; see in 81, izem, he dis- 
honoured. 
Hannis, wife, and halis, man, are pecu- 
liar to Temght. [Qu. halis, a " fellow ; " 
hannis, " his mate ? "] 
Taliad, lass ; iliad, lad, are very like 
Arab, welad, son, which in Temght also 
apjjears as abarad. 
97. Sellueluer? But see 79. 
* In Prod. Son, tauyem, tulistis ; ahauyet, agite 
fevtel Elwuayamas,{rea,{X etwuayamas educatis ei. 
97. / hold fast, etafagh. 
We take [lay hold of~\, nuttef. 
Catch it, hold it, ottuft. (See 88.) 
Hold fast the cord, atef irriwi. 
Let go the cord, selluelue irriwi. 
/ let go, sellueliieragh. 
98. Pluck off, ekas. 
/ take off, pluck, ekasagh. 
Raise, take away, [tolle !] atkal. 
/ carry off, atkalagh. 
L put the load on the camel, ota- 
gergh ilalen fel amenis ; nek 
etajejjegh ilalen. 
[He heaped things upon him"], 
egag fellas ilalen. 
99. / take the load ( from the camel), 
etakozagh ilalen ; ezozebagh 
ilalen (fel amenis). 
98. There are four roots in Kab. with 
the radicals ks : (1.) Ekkes, aufer, exue ; 
ikkes, exuit. (2.) Eks, pasce (pecus) ; iksa, 
pavit ; ikes, pascit. (3.) Ikes, pupugit, 
momordit (serpens). (4.) Eksu, plica ; 
iksa, plicuit ; ikessu, plicat. To the 3rd I 
refer Delaporte's confregit arbores ventus. 
I have tried to resolve (2.) and (3.) into 
vulsit, carpsit. See also iks in 167. ; ekos, 
213. 
Atkal at first seems to be the Arabic 
thaqal; but Ben Musa spells it with simple 
k, not k. Yet atkel, government. 
In Ghad. jejdq means laden. We have 
here a root gag, gak or gagh, meaning to 
heap or load ; frequentative, jejegh. Ota- 
gergh is present tense (for otdgeghagh 9), and 
etajejjegh apparently the frequentative. 
99. Etakozagh might seem to mean, "I 
come down," but it is here causative : as 
ezOzehagh for esdzehagh, because (I sup- 
pose) s becomes z through the proximity of 
