BRAHUI LANGUAGE. The grammatical system discloses the secret of its parentage. The use of suffixes, most of which are traceable to the same source as Dravidian, the essential forms of the personal pronouns and striking analogies in the pronominal terminations of the plural in the verb, in the formation of the causal, and, above all, in the organic negative conjugation, all show that the language is sprung from the same source as the Dravidian group. "It has freely absorbed the alien vocabulary of Persian, Balochi, Sindhi, and other neighbouring languages, but its grammatical system has preserved a sturdy existence." See Linguistic Survey of India, vol. iv. pp. 619-636; Denys Bray, The Brahui Language (1909) ; Census of India, vol. iv. p. 137 (iii) ; Census of India, vol. iv. p. 82 (1921) .