β. There are, however, means of determining whether it is a case of reduplication or of a formative. As an Original IN laklak has been established in § 74, it is surely simplest to regard Day. lalak as a product of this laklak ; and further, since a word kiskis occurs in many IN languages, we shall assert that this reduplication also accounts for the first syllable of Mal. kikis.
γ. Mad. possesses many striking cases of forms transitional between full and partial reduplication, as the following table shows:
Mad. | Mad. second form | Modern Jav. |
sĕpsĕp | sĕssĕp | sĕsĕp, “ to suck out ”. |
tĕptĕp | tĕttĕp | tĕtĕp, “ firm ”. |
sĕksĕk | sĕssĕk | sĕsĕk, “ narrow ” |
δ. The writer has, however, no means at hand of deciding the question whether every case of partial reduplication of the root in IN languages has proceeded from an Original IN complete reduplication or whether partial reduplication existed in Original IN side by side with the complete form.[1]
77. The question now presents itself, whether reduplication of the root entails a definite modification of meaning. Now we actually do observe that an intensification of the idea of the root can be expressed by reduplication, as is shown by the following table of Karo words:
- ↑ [See also Essay II, §§ 57-9, and Essay IV, §§ 195-6, 198.]