BTHNOLOGT OP INDO-PACIFIC IBLAKBS, 



APPENBIX TO CHAP. YI. OF FABT 11. 



COUPAHAms VOCABTJLART OF TttS WtfaiBHALS OP THK 



One, 



7j»7mi,— tti-oi, mWA, mmd, mm, mi, men (Kol, Gond). UJtfatndm^—' 

 Wei Kas ; muo, niDai, Mon; bo Karen; po Angami Nago ; aima 

 S i n IT] ^ h 0 ; in oe K ft tu bo j n , K a , Ch ong ; mof. Ana m . Malfit/ Penhmt la, 

 — mill Beaifii. A^mtema J—amw (*2) Mairasi ; lahui. Brunei' I. (2). Wui, 

 moi, nine, is probably the oldest of these forms Africaj—KicHrnhvi 

 «nuip ^S^iiflb. nio^'n, S. Af mu-m, mo-cki &c,); Akuongo, enm ; Cnm. 

 mo ; Nuba wa-nH«, wee-ra &c,,- Huago nio-W, Ben fa lx>. iV. emdM, 

 Asian, — om, uem, Samoied-; emu, &m n &c, Tungua. 



bar-irt, KoT , bar-en, Gontl. tUtra-^r, Kasia ; ba Mon; 

 bar Ka, Cbong; pia Kamb. (3 oC Kol); bef, Anam. Afal. Pen.f 

 — bi'j Si'man^; mar, A«-mar, ma, Bi'tjua. JV t\sia,^n\B,\'ffoIi^ Tbukcbi, 

 M. and S, African^ — Uiri &c,; \W Afr —fire &<■ , Akuiinfia, f'pa ; Cam, 

 ba; Karab. ebalij Rungo mba-ni ; Cflilb. raaj; Mok, rba; Boiig, 

 baba; BiD.be; lb. aboar, abo 



Three. 



Ind.f^op^ia, p-fa Kol. Gond. ?7ft,— pui, pai, Monj peb, Ka^ Cbong ; 

 bai Kamb., ba Anam, Mai. Pen,, — wiup^ Sim.; am^pi, uwi-pe, am- 

 pet, Binuft 



I can find nodei^ided foreign ajfliDfties. Tlif* tprm (pid, Mon, wtd-p 

 Sinmng) apjiears to be a flexion of mid I. Tbc Binii« form appears to 

 have been modified to accord witb tbe Malay am-pat. 4, tm Bmua 

 terms above 3 being Malay, In the extreme N E ot Asia and the ad- 

 jacent Polar American languages of tbe aame formation, j;'! is an de- 

 ment In 2, ;u'gayat, Gliukchij, Eskimo, It does not occur in N. Ameri* 

 can formations. 



T bere is a distinct term for 3, bavinf? a very limited range, — lai Kassia; 

 bd, Car Nicobar ; luba Nunkowry. Unless t!ie Namaang t?ffn-ram, Mn- 

 bing and Tablunfj lem, are connected with tbia word, it has no ptber di- 

 rect artinilieiS (hut arc very obvious. Tbe following terms may be rela- 

 ted to it i— Kasisia Adw-dai, Auw-dui 2 ( ? 3 j ku is G in Kuki, Karen 

 &c, but here it may be mi^reiy tbe Kassia prefix fi(i,-d and r being fre- 

 <^upn(ly preceded by n in KafiBia)( ra5, 8, Bon^ju, roe Kuki [B{>e Eioitt]; 

 There is anal her, and, as it nppearB to me, more jirobaljle explanation of 

 tills form, IftliB basis of ibe Man- Anam flysteni was strictly binary, 

 and pui, wui, is sim|)ly mui, 1, a little disguised, the Kicobar lui may- 

 be the origincd form of the Kasia lai, aud^ like pui, a mera vai'iation of 

 mvd. 



Four. 



Ind. — pon-ia, K-pnn-.'«, «-pn-?a Kol ; i?'pun«fa^ w-pbun'Goiid. Ulfr:,' 

 —poo, Mon; poii, Cbong; luian, Kd; buan, boan, Kamb.; bun Anam; 

 fiiun, i'eun, fen, Nicobar. (? /traaug, Sinmng), 



This numeral is vcr^- remarkable. It is a moflifif-ation, fouml In Aso- 

 cesia, of \he Alrico-Malagasi term wMcb, in augther form, has spread 



