[74] See Latham in the “Proceedings of the Philological Society,” vol. vi. (1852-3), p. 85; and in the “Transactions of the Philological Society” for 1856, pp. 40, 41.
[75] “Charakteristik,” &c., p. 113.
[76] This order of the pronouns was a later innovation in the language, and seems due to Semitic influence. In the older period of the speech the form was rû-n-mu or rû-mu-n.
[77] Suetonius: “De illustr. Gramm.,” 22. “M. Pomponius Marcellus ... quum ex oratione Tiberium reprehendisset, affirmante Ateio Capitone, ‘et esse illud Latinum, et, si non esset, futurum certe jam inde;’ ‘Mentitur,’ inquit, ‘Capito. Tu enim, Cæsar, civitatem dare potes hominibus, verbo non potes.’”
[78] Sir John Stoddart: “Universal Grammar, or the Pure Science of Language,” 2nd edition, 1852.
[79] By French writers.
[80] As by Schleicher.
[81] As by Ascoli.
[82] In A. J. Ellis: “Early English Pronunciation,” pp. 1293-1307, 1352-1357.
[83] Humboldt’s “Travels,” Engl. Tr., i. p. 322.