INDEX. 



542 



Names of Authors and other Persons in Heavy-face Type. 

 Titles of Papers in small caps. 



Abaca. Musa textilis, see Hemp. 

 Abbeville, Sanson d', Map by, 250-251. 

 Abog, god of the hunt, 23, 199. 

 Abuy, myth animal, 40, 62, 227. 

 Adolescence, Ceremonies of, 270-271. 

 Aduarte, Diego de, O. P., cited, 36, 39, 

 41, 80, 247, 248, 256, 258, 259, 260^ 

 261, 262, 263, 264, 266, 279 (bibl.). 

 .Esthetic interests, 72-73. 



tabu, 243-244. 

 Agong altar, see Sonaran. 



ceremonial, see Sonar, Rite of. 

 containing water, 126, 127, 128, 



130-131. 

 used as unit of barter, 84. 

 Agongs, Description of, 83-84. 



in marriage ceremony, 181-182, 



183, 184, 185. 

 Illustration of, 146. 



Agongs, Manner of playing, 84-85. 

 Names of, 133, 146. 

 References to, 77, 98, 101, 102, 

 103, 104, 117, 144, 163,164,175, 

 176, 222, 245, 253. 

 Agricultural offerings, 8, 11, 89, 226, 



253, 272-273. 

 Alang, a charm, 204, 231. 

 Alat, a charm, 182, 183, 184,204,207. 

 Ali, Datu, References to, 4, 5. 

 Altar shelf, 77, 91, 103. 

 Altars, see Shrines and altars. 

 American government,Bagobo attempts 

 to please, 97, 166, 186-187. 

 lady, First at Talun, 203. 

 Museum of Natural History, 208. 

 rites, Questions concerning, 110. 

 Americans ascend Apo without charms, 

 32. 



5 * 2 Bagobo words used in this paper are accented on the penultimate unless an accent 

 mark is placed on some other syllable. The stress is usually very slight. The vowels have 

 in general their continental sounds (a as in ah, etc.), but « before a final m (ginum) is 

 regularly short, as in English numb, and unaccented a before final n is almost lost. When 

 marked short, '/, e, i, o, ii are broadly equivalent to the same short vowels in English. 

 As for the diphthongs, ai is sounded as in aisle; ei as in eight, au like ow in now. 

 Initial Y in proper names (Yting) is like / spoken rapidly and with little stress, or slurred 

 over; medial y is like English y, but is kept well back in the throat. All final vowels are 

 sounded. In regard to consonantal phonetic values, the surds t, p and k, and the sonants 

 d, b and g are given much as in English, but k and b are uttered rather explosively. 

 Velars, while stressed and explosive, are not sounded very lew down in the pharynx. An 

 initial velar seems often to be cut off by stopping the breath. M and n follow the usual nasal 

 type. The combination ng is like ng in wing; under no circumstances is it sounded like 

 ng in single, unless a second g is added, as in the exclamation "Oh manggo !" ("Yes, indeed"). 

 L is given from the tip of the tongue, and with stress. R tends to be trilled. .S' is as in 

 the initial of sill. W is soft, as in bower. No attempt is made in this outline to indicate 

 by exact symbols the finer shades of Bagobo phonetics. 



