oa 
342 -General Notes. [March, ? 
v. BANTU GROUP.— 
ganga, Makua, Yao, Nyassa, Makoude, Nyamwezi, Shambala, Gindo, 
Zaramo, Angazidja, Gogo, Boondei, Ruganda, Pokomo, ami 
Chaga, Teita, Nyoro, Sena, Quilimane, Maravi, Inhanbane. 
C. West Bantu, from Cameron mountains to Tropic of Capricorn : Kongoese, 
Bunda, Herero (Damara land), Loango, Kongo, Mpwongwe, Bakule, 
Benga, Dualla, Jsubu, Fernandian, 
vi. HOTTENTOT-BUSHMAN GROUP.— 
A. Hottentot. Namaqua only surviving dialect, 
B. Bushmen, including Central African pigmies. 
Of course, Mr. Cust does not propose this as an exhaustive 
classification of African tribes or languages. The title of the 
article is sufficiently definite. Each tribal name is accompanl 
with the name of the author who has compiled a vocabuarly, 
grammar or dictionary. 
In afew months Mr. Cust will publish a language map of 
Africa with a bibliographical appendix showing where the lan- 
guage is spoken with reference to the map. 
In the same number of the Journal is a discussion of the words 
Tartar and Tatar, with a decided leaning to the former. 
ANTHROPOLOGY IN Great Britain.—The November number of 
the Anthropological Institute Journal gives us the following 
original papers: > 
On the aboriginal inhabitants of the Andaman islands (Part 11). By E. H. Msn, 
On the relation of Stone Circles to outlying stones or Tumili, or neighboring hills, 
some inferences thereon. By A. L. Lewis. Bs 
The Papuans and the Polynesians. By C. Staniland Wake. 
On some rites and customs of Old Japan. By C. Pfoundes. 
English surnames from an ethnological point of view. By Dr. John Beddoe. 
On the survival of certain racial features in the population of the British Isles. By J. 
Park Harrison, 
Inverting the order, Mr. Harrison looks for the evidence o | 
race survivals in a large collection of photographs collecte? a 
which he has brought into comparison a large series of ob 
tions in the continental areas from which the English race 
lieved to have come. a 
Mr. Beddoe has collected the names of peers, baronets, oo 
trates, M. P’s, F. R. S's, College of Physicians, University M 
mayors, Knights of Bath, sergeants-at-law, subscribers tO a 2 
and pauper lists. From these he has deduced the per CEN i 
Normans, Saxons, local names, occupations, nicknames, pare 
ics, Welsh, Scotch, Irish and foreign names. e 
Mr. Pfoundes has succeeded in rescuing from oblivion > 
remarkable old legends and survivals in Japan. re classe 
The paper by Mr. Wake is an attack upon Mr. Keate 3 ere 
