824. Under the name of aorist 825. All these varieties are bound together 826. The aorist-system is a formation 827. In the RV., nearly half the roots 828. Simple Aorist 829. Root-aorist 830. Same roots are decidedly 831. Aorists of the same class 832. Further, from a few roots 833. Again, from a larger number of roots 834. So far only active forms 835. Modes of the Root-aorist 836. Of true subjunctives 837. Optative. The optative active 838. Precative active forms 839. Imperative forms of the root-aorist 840. Participles of the Root-aorist 841. Roots exhibiting in the older language 842. Passive Aorist third person singular 843. This person is formed by adding 844. Before the ending a final vowel 845. These forms are made in RV. 846. The a-aorist 847. Makes in the RV. a small figure 848. The inflection of this aorist 849. Modes of the a-aorist 850. The optatives are few 851. A complete series of active imperative 852. Participles of the a-aorist 853. Irregularities of the a-aorist 854. The stem voc 855. Isolated forms 856. Reduplicated Aorist 857. Its characteristic is a reduplication 858. The consonant of the reduplication 859. If the root is a light syllable 860. If the root is a heavy syllable 861. The favored relation 862. Examples of this aorist from roots 863. Of special irregularities 864. The inflection of the reduplicated aorist 865. The middle forms are rare in the older language 866. Strengthening before the endings 867. Forms of the inflection without union-vowel 868. Few roots are said 869. Modes of the Reduplicated Aorist 870. Optative forms are even rarer 871. The indubitable forms 872. No participle is found belonging 873. Sigmatic or Sibilant Aorist 874. The sibilant tense-stem 875. In the vast majority of cases 876. Classification for the varieties of sibilant-aorist 877. The s-aorist 878. The general rules as to the strengthening 879. The endings are the usual secondary ones 880. Before endings beginning with t or th 881. This variety of sibilant aorist 882. The omission of s 883. Certain roots weaken 884. Roots ending in changeable 885. The s-aorist is made 886. Irregularities of stem-formation 887. The principal peculiarity 888. If the root ends in a vowel 889. If the root ends in a consonant 890. A relic of this peculiarity 891. The indicative forms 892. Proper subjunctive forms are not rare 893. Of irregularities are to be noted 894. Optative forms of this aorist 895. Imperative persons from this aorist 896. Participles of the s-aorist 897. Participles of the s-aorist 898. The tense-stem of this aorist 899. The rules as to the strengthening 900. Of exceptions may be noted 901. The endings are as in the preceding formation 902. As examples of the inflection 903. The number of roots from which forms of this aorist 904. Irregularities are to be noticed 905. As usual, augmentless indicative forms 906. Of subjunctive forms with primary endings 907. The middle optative of this aorist 908. Of imperative forms 909. No words having a participial ending 910. This is the only aorist of which forms 911. According to the grammarians 912. Properly only a sub-form 913. The whole series of older indicative 914. Of proper subjunctives 915. Middle forms of this aorist 916. The sa-aorist 917. As the tense-stem ends in a 918. As example of inflection: root - point 919. Forms of the sa-aorist 920. In the indicative 921. Precative 922. The precative active 923. Precative middle is made 924. As example of inflection: root - be 925. Precative active is a form of very rare occurrence 926. Uses of the Aorist 927. Aorist of the later language 928. Aorist has the value of a proper perfect 929. This distinction of the aorist from the imperfect and perfect 930. The boundary between what has just been |