ADDENDA AND CORRIGENDA. 
The following omissions should be supplied, and corrections made. 
They are printed on one side of the paper only to allow of easy correction. 
A. Grammar. 
§ 65. The genitive of is given as iiK or ^ TCT. Subsequent research 
has shown me that the form is an oblique genitive form, only agreeing 
with nouns in an oblique case : and that all pronominal genitives can take 
a similar oblique form. Thus, we get— 
Direct genitive. Oblique genitive. 
sifsT^T, etc. 
These oblique genitives cannot be used with nouns in the form of the 
Nominative case, but only with nouns in one of the Oblique cases. 
Closely connected with the above, I have noted the following words, 
not pronouns, which also take an oblique form in 
Direct. Oblique . 
‘ first.’ 
fm*:, ‘ second.’ 
ftoC, ‘ third.’ 
3^, ‘ great.’ epfT 
‘ a guard.’ tRVT ^T, from (so and so’s) guard. 
‘ exchange.’ ‘ in exchange.’ 
There are doubtless many others which I have not noted yet with 
certainty. Compare the oblique forms of verbal nouns in § 189. 
The following examples will make the above remarks clear. The 
matter will be found treated at greater length in an essay shortly to be 
published in the Asiatic Society’s Journal. 
«.—Genitives agreeing with Nouns in the Nominative form, 
i . e ., Direct Genitives. 
how wonderful must be the beauty 
of her whose becluli you have brought. 
K K 
