TUB ETTlNdlOrtT OF TUB LVIMA.V iltClttPFJlAOO. 



Hon. The two most wide, spread words for hog in thv Indo-lNiciuV. 

 inlands wp, 1st, pxtaka, htmka, phtut*a and '2nd ir/. >rmr/, irawjf. wmim, 

 4tfoi,btittii /xibai, tut/to, hahu, but, fundi, hoJi,/ttji. burnt. Tho first i> only 

 f ; umil in 1'oivneaia, and is ol Tibeto— Indian oriirin pluik libot, 

 isAaff Bhutan. Ilimbu. Kiranti, Mikir&c. ; wok. Kv*m, Cham|.<buu£ &e. ; 

 w*X Magnr, vah Nafta, Garo, jcma* Obouan«>» Tin- 2nd fa the mo , t 

 prevalent m Indonesia, and is distinguished, in nit its variation*, from 

 the 1st, by the absence of the k or its substitute / ; and is found on the 

 Continent in Sauhili (Africa) and Bonju (Trunswdiu) iouL Another 

 African form, — bahaladc^ Fulah, bule, Berakoli, apparently Joins thw 

 to another root, and liK8 also its direct Indonesian derivative In bulafy, 

 lluol. The same word, witli the vibratory form of the second conso- 

 nant, is ftaiud in SuuliTli. fairm, to which corresponds tho burum ol 

 Krob (Torres Strait.) which is ubo the nearest of all the known It lone- 

 siaii and African to the inverse fonn of the Malgeri - lamb*. A fourth 

 African ]urtt '4rU Buuhi.'i, <;ut'u Kwiliinuui. > ! «/rlt, Kwfttfiaim L QObcU 

 GuiK appears also to have its Indonesian derivative iu </i - Besisi (Malay 

 Peninsula.) Kut Rajmnhali, is kuii in Bntan._ The ) u suar, surka 

 &c. Kambojan chur, cbernk, clmruk, is lound in Viti, t. ,* and appar- 

 ently in the Java, tiawian and liaii e. belong. U results tVoin 'he ub<»vi 

 that" the bog fe chiefly known in Indonesia by African names, thai the 

 prevalence of these, names, and tin? existence of the animal iu Urn wild 

 Mum. on vcin.!d tin- permanent engraftmenl of the Tibetan pa the 

 Indonesian vocabularies, hut that the Tibeto-Anameso who proceed- 

 ed to the eastward at an early period carried Lbe Tibetan name with 

 litem. 1 doubt not however bet that the Tibetan form will be found in 

 Tli» Arch > idso. 



Buffalo. The most prevalent Indonesian name kaint, kartau 4c. 

 haft been immediately derived from die basin of the Mcuara, — kutao t 

 tti.-tv, kapao ko Champa, Khomen, Ka, Chong But the word is 

 nlfeii, more remotely, Indium— hero, karu, Bhumij, Ho,— kartm, Tamil. 



Javanese ineuo is the wide spread Tiheto-Intfian and Indian Mobs, 

 rnhc, trujfii) iftaji, moixho, muJiwt t ftiaiuft, ft/uim*, reuak, [cowp.jamtit 

 Arabic. - ' R 



Cow. The most common Indoupsian words are J si htuf>u t latnlti, 

 }em!>i*k ki\ *3nd sapi, a mpi. The first has been directly derived from 

 the African (&nw*r T Sauhili, him Am baric, Iwnnn Oallu, angumbe 

 Maimed, ttwmfcii Sauhili,— (jttm'e Kuilimui.it but the roots are also 

 J .nil in Tibeto-Anam region,— bxn% bull and /« Tibetan (bou, 

 Aonm) &e cow. The same combination is I ii l > ' • "( Tibet 

 and in the Tibirknd, plactnpt the cow first, utpi sppeftTS to be referalua 

 to two Himalayan names, — «w Newar, f-i Sunwar [the ha ol'Tflait &e, 

 put Dhimul W Malay aiem,] Comp iebu, apis. 



Goat. The Malay kajntnng appears to contain two roots, — first fchr 

 ■ same as the kami of the Koreng and Marani ( .vianipuri) and the second 

 African l*rur, bmif.n, fcc. _ . r 



lioa. the astt of the Javanese. Timoreans. Hups fee. luu neen 

 derived from the basin of Aft lre%mdi (Natra az t bu, Sfc. r Uttt, ule, at 

 African ; aha, all HajuiahaJi ; fc.oti.tdnU N. W. Australian. AtUU 

 African; kutia r kttkhu Indinn; kicUo Kagayan, hotta, Atwtralian. 



• If this stood alow it would be coaiidend accidental, but the Viti contain* many 



oth»r evidences of having reosivvd a later Indonesian bnlutnec tban tae Pobraeaun. 

 f In tbm# fimnfOftft o{ the wlilcit spread nantesnu^to il> M:»ii'V.--''h.!hvi . 



tnriian, 



S *2 



