The Diseases of Language 409 NOMINATIVE SINGULAR van (water) fatrus (enemy) jds (progeny) svdsa (sister) GENITIVE SINGULAR vannas fdtros jds svdsur Many pages of this book could be filled if we set out all the flexions of a single Sanskrit or a single Greek verb with respect to time, person, voice, and mood The following example illustrates only the personal flexions of one tense (present} and of both voices (active and passive) The mood is indicative, i e the form used in simple statements. ACTIVE PASSIVE SANSKRIT GREEK SANSKRIT GREEK " I, Sing - 2 .3 dadhami dadhasi dadhati didorm didos dfdosi(n) dadhe dhatse dhatte didomai didosai didotai fi. Dual 4 2 13 dadhvas dhatthas dhattas didoton didoton dadhvahe dadhathe dadhate didosthon didosthon Plur -j 3* U dadhmas dhattha dadhati didomen didote didoasi(n) d^dhtnahe dhaddhve dadhate didometha didosthe didontai The Anglo-American equivalents would be I, you, we, or they give and he gives (active)., and / am, you, we, they are, he is given (passive), making altogether three forms of the verb give and three of to be, or six in all to represent the meaning of eighteen Sanskrit words For eight different forms of a modern English verb we can make above thirty-six corresponding forms of the Sanskrit or Greek verb The complete Sanskrit verb finite, that is the verb without its infinitives, participles, and verbal adjectives plus then: flexions, has 743 different forms, as against the 268 of Greek From a complete Greek verb we get the enormous number of 507 forms, from a Latin one 143, and from a Gothic verb 94 The English verb usually has four, or at most five forms (e g give, gives, gave, giving, given} If we add seven forms of to be, four of to have, together with shall or will and should or would,