3*30 Supplement by Br Lath am. 



1. The Moko of Mrs Kilham. 



2. The Bongo of do. 



3. The Kaylee numerals of Bowdich. 



4. The Sheekan do. 



5. The Oongoomai do. 

 (3. The Oonjoobai do. 



VIII. Four vocabularies represent the language of the 

 countries on the Gaboon. 



1. The Cape Gonsalvo Lopez, or words of the Mithridates, 

 very short (?) 



2. Bowdich' s Empoongwai numerals. 



3. Mrs Kilham' s Rungo. 



4. Vocabulaire de la Langue Ponga par M. Pacifique 

 Henri Delaporte. Mem. Soc. Ethn., vol. ii. p. 197. 



For Fernando Po I only know of half-a-dozen words. 



The Mokko vocabulary of the Mithridates, the Akuonga, 

 Uhobo, and Kouri vocabularies of Mrs Kilham, undoubtedly 

 belong to the tract just gone over ; although their precise 

 geographical position is unknown to me. The languages of 

 Portuguese Africa have their closest affinities with the 

 tongues south of them. 



Considering that the Yarribean dialects are the only ones 

 whereof our data approach a sufficiency, it is considered un- 

 necessary to insist upon the provisional character of the fore- 

 going classification. In respect to the ethnographical value 

 of the groups enumerated, I have not a moment's hesitation 

 in predicating of them a radical and fundamental unity, the 

 differences lying within comparatively narrow limits. They 

 all belong to that great group which may conveniently be 

 called Ibo-Ashantee ; of which they form only a part. 



