518 ANTHROPOLOGY. 



Chakency, M. de. — M61anges sur la langue Basque ; des couleura symboliques con- 



8id^r€es comme symboles des points de I'horizon chez les peuples du Nouveau- 



Monde. Actes d. 1. Soc. Philologique, tome viii. 

 COLLUDO, Antonio de Coruna y. — Zoque, the language of Chiapas, translated by J. A 



J. Dacus. Tr. Acad. Sc, St. Louis, iv, i, 6 pp. 

 Cr^vaux, J., P. Sagot et L. Adam. — Grammaires et vocabulaires arrouaque, piapoco 



et d'autres langues de la region des Guyanes. Paris : Maisonneuve. 

 Eells, M. — The Twaua language of Washington Territory. Am. Antiquarian, iii, 



pp. 296-303. 

 FiSKE, John. — What we learn from old Aryan words. Atlantic Month., April. 



The theory of a common origin of all languages. Atlantic Month., Nov. 



Gatschet, Albert S. — Classification into seven linguistic stocks of western Indian 



dialects contained in 40 vocabularies. Wheeler's U. S. Geog. Survey W. lOOtb 

 Merid., vii, pp. 403-485. With copious notes. 



Legends to illustrate the method of recording Indian languages, let An. 



Eep. Bureau of EthnoL, Smithson. lust., pp. 583-587. 



Linguistic notes ; The Taeansas ; The Campos of Peru; Shoshoni dialects in 



Southern California; Notes on the Iroquois; Names for mounds Malabanchia. 

 Am. Antiquarian, iv, pp. 73-77 ; Wandot, the Paez language. Am. Antiquarian, 

 iii, pp. 249-253 ; Shawnee, numeral classifiers in Maya, the Sarakhole, Khasia. 

 Am. Antiquarian, iii, pp. 337-338. 



Phonetics of the Kayome language. Science, Sept. 17. 



Volk und Sprache der Timucua. Ztschr. d. Ethnol., Berlin, xiii, 189-200. 



Hoffman, W. J. — On the interpretation of pictographs by the application of gesture 



signs. Am. Assoc, Cincinnati. 

 HoLDEN, Edward S. — Studies in Central American picture-writing. 1st An. Rep, 



Bureau of Ethnol., Smithson. Inst., pp. 205-245, figs. 48-60. 



The hieroglpyhs of Central America. Scribner's Month., Dec. 



Lubbock, John. — Observations on ants, bees, and wasps; Power of communicating 



something approaching language. Nature, Jan. 13, 1881. 3 pj). reported in full. 

 Languages of India, with map. (Miss. Herald.) Am. Antiquarian, iii, 130. 

 Maxlery, Garrick. — Sign language of the North American Indians compared with 



that of other peoples' and deaf mutes. 1st An. Rep. Bureau of Ethnol., Smithson. 



Inst., pp. 263-552, figs. 61-346. (10.0 copies extracted and reprinted in pamphlet 



form with original pagination.) 



The gesture speech of man. Chairman's address before the subsection of 



Anthropology, American Association, Cincinnati, Ohio, Aug., 1881. Salem, 33 pp. 



McCurdy, James F. — Aryo-Temitic speech: A study in linguistic archaeology. An- 

 dover, W. F. Draper. 176 pp. 8vo. 



Relations of the Aryan and Semitic languages. Bibliotheca Sacra, Jan. 31 



pp. 



Powell, J. W. — On the evolution of language, as exhibited in the specialization of 

 the grammatic processes, the diflerentiation of the parts of speech, and the inte- 

 gration of the sentence, from a study of the Indian languages. Ist An. Rep. Bu- 

 reau of Ethnol., Smithson. Inst., pp. 3-16. 



RiGGS, S. L. — The Dakota language. Am. Antiquarian, iii, pp. 243-244. 



Smith, Mrs. Erminnie A. — Comparative differences in the Iroquois group of dialects. 

 Animal myths of the Iroquois. — Am. Assoc, Cincinnati. 



Society for the Promotion of Christian Knowledge. London. The Book of Common 

 Prayer in Ojibway ; also in Cree Syllables; the Book of Common Prayer. (By the 

 Rev. J. Horden.) 



Trumbull, J. Hammond.— Indian names of places, &c., in and on the borders of Con- 

 necticut, with interpretation of some of them. Hartford, Brown & Gross. 8vo. 

 93 pp. 



