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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 December 2013
1 The choice of the symbol j instead of y to represent the sound of the English and Sanskrit y and the German j is unfortunate, especially as it is applied even to Latin, where i might have sufficed. If the author thought it worth while to depart from the established symbols ḭ and ṷ, there is every reason for preferring the y, since in writing English and Sanskrit, not to mention French, j is used with quite a different meaning.
2 Brugmann, 's Kurze Vergl. Grammatik, p. 361Google Scholar; cf. Classical Review, xviii. (1904), p. 413.