67 
1899.] 
Aorist. First Conjugation. 
As regards verbs ending in vowels, the usual rule is followed 
Thus, from khi , eat, the aorist participle is kheyov; and from 
ci, drink, ceyov. 
From f*r ni, take, we get, as usual niyov, not neyov. 
di, give and hi, take, are, as in the Past, irregular. Of 
di , the Aorist Participle is ditsov (pi. ditsgy; fern, txnfsj 
ditsgy a ), and of f? hi, hetsov (pi. hetsay; fern. 
hetagy a ) (viii. iii. 32). See p. 61. 
Double pronominal suffixes can be added, as in the case of the 
Past. Thus, karyo-th-as, thou madest me; karyd-m-ay , 
I made for thee; karyo-m-as , I made for him. Other examples 
are unnecessary. The rules are exactly the same as in the case of the 
past tense. Vide, however, special cases mentioned after the Paradigm 
of the third conjugation (p. 70). 
(6). Impersonal verb (viii. iii. 14). (c. forms only). 
‘ I laughed,’ lit. ‘ it was laughed by me,’ &c. 
Singular 1 aso-m, I laughed. 
2 asd-th , thou laughedst. 
3 aso-n, he laughed. 
Plural 1 asov, we laughed. 
2 aso-w a , you laughed. 
3 asd-kh, they laughed. 
When an impersonal verb is conjugated in the femiuine (see pp. 22 
and 48) we get 
Singular and Plural. 
Singular 1 
2 
3 
Plural 1 
2 
3 
tsuvyeya-m, I quarrelled. 
sgsj’q'ST tsuvyeya-th, thou didst quarrel. 
tsuvyeya-n , he quarrelled. 
tsuvyey a , we quarrelled. 
tsuvyey <l -w a , you quarrelled. 
tsuvyeya-kh, they quarrelled. 
