512 
THE KILIMA-NJARO EXPEDITION. 
English. 
Masai. 
Latuka, Bari, &c. 
40 
Artam. 
Galla, Sad-tam or 
Sodom. 
Somali, Afarton. 
(Query : Is there here an evidence 
Galla, Afurtam. 
50 
of an older form of 4 in Masai, 
related to the Galla, viz. Ar, 
Af ur ¥) 
Onom (also hfeiduruja) 
Somali, ^antom. 
60 
Ipi (“many”); beyond this the 
Galla, §antam. 
Galla, D’iba r= 100. 
All 
numerals do not seem to be fur¬ 
ther expressed in Masai. Ipi is 
used for 70, 80, 90, 100 in¬ 
differently. 
Adjectives. 
Boki (perhaps -bo, one, pluralized) 
Alone 
-ben, 6, na, or ei 2 
Lat., Abodi (from Bo- 
Bad 
Torono; pi. Torok. (In Masai 
di, one). 
Bari. - doro = fallen, 
the pi. of adjectives is often 
spoilt, damaged. 
Beautiful 
used in the singular as an in- 
tensitive ; thus Torok means in 
the singular, “ very bad.”) 
Sidai 
(vide good) 
Bitter 
-dua 
Lat., -dua (6, na, e). 
Black 
-rok 
Lat., -riok. 
Eloitwe 
Bari, Elurwe. 
Bold 
Ol-ehoni; pi. Enok, el (the manly) 
Lat., Ol-le. 
Broad 
Dabas 
Ala 
Bari, Anagalan. 
Broken 
-derie 
(spoilt) 
Clean (vide 
-ibor 
Lat., -ibor. 
white) 
Clever (cun- 
Nyen, or Neh 
Bari, Kaita. 
ning) 
Cruel 
-man 
Dead 
-toa 
Bari, Atoan. 
2 Whenever the adjective is given with a hyphen preceding it, the 
reader must understand that it is merely the root, and that the 
masc., fern., or neuter particles must he prefixed according to gender. 
Invariable adjectives commence with a capital letter. 
