negative has three forms, mogwd, being shortened into moo, and ma for the future; it must be noted that when the negative is used with a verb the verb takes on a different inflection. Muna, is never; hakies, frequent; melooitc, more so ; ndgoo and abes mean continually; nan- kimioo, quickly; kaskzv, whilst; aptceloo, especially; ap (aptce) again, aplcoo, forever, and elp, also. Edook, means indeed; ma {mate), still, yet; na, so then, or now then; wegooptck soon; seoowoo often;sak, long ago, kes sak in ancient times. Here is oola let; there, etlin; distant amasek; on this side, asumak; on the opposite side, asak; on one side, anaboo; everywhere, baskwoo; upstream, petoo ; down stream, bopkd; out to sea, abaktook; and along the shore, tcajegak. Elak, means improper; kabaseoo, con¬ fusedly; noodloo, incomplete, meoo and kukwa in a straight line; kiiktu in a circle; upkudiik upwards; iiesiai downwards; tebu within. Carefully is menakoolc; as you please, tan pasuk; in vain, sak; so tele; well, weld; suddenly wiskoo; hardly wdgutc. In the morning is wopk; toward evening, ulanook; in the spring, segoon or sikw; in summer, nipk; in autumn, tbkwdk; in winter, kesik. How ? is tale ? answered by tele introducing the reply ; las ? is how many ; tadooje ? how far ; tan ? when. Prepositions. Prepositions are in some cases inflected to denote person, as noodek, koodek and odetck, I, thou and he, behind; before is muskalook, nalaio, kuskalook or kesk and ooskalos. 'From' when not implied in the dative case is represented by a number of inflections of the stem wetc (or oetc) as wetcei, I am from, wete'een, thou art from, wetceet, he is from, being declinable through¬ out. Dr. Rand gives wejadegamk, and Mr. Charles Bernard represents the same sound by spelling it oetjategemg in the alphabet adopted by Rev. F. Pacifique , in which, sounded in French the tj represents tc, and oe the we of Dr. Rand , while k and g are interchangeable. The preposition aietck, is often interjected when one is puzzled to think of a name, and Dr. Rand gives it as an exclamation meaning ' what do you call it!' There is a prepositional particle edoo or tu