ON ETHNOGRAPHICAL PHILOLOGY. 
177 
So has the Wawu; which is, like the Kerrapay, a Dahomey language. 
English 
child. 
English 
head. 
Wawu 
anii. 
Wawu 
ngoru 
Ruogo 
o<ina. 
Ako 
ori. 
Ibu 
oata. 
English 
hand. 
English 
sun. 
W'awu 
be. 
Wawu 
yirri. 
Uhobo 
abo. 
.4ko 
orujiff. j 
The Calbranumerals, up to five, of the Mithridates are Jess like those of 
the Old Calebar than might be 
Rungo than aught else. 
expected from the 
name. They are rather 
English. 
Calbra. 
llungo. 
Old Calebnr. 
me 
barne 
mori 
ket. 
tm 
ma 
nibani 
uba. 
three 
terre 
ntsharu 
itta. 
four 
ni 
nl 
ina. 
Jive 
sonni 
otani 
itien. 
Thug we have, in respect to the dialects quoted under either the name 
f^ltbnr or one similar to it, the Calebar, Karaba, Calbra, Kerrapay, and 
trepee; whilst the Grebo is a name sometimes given to the Kru language, 
MU whilst a portion of the Delta of the Niger is called Ikolobe. Yet the 
Karaba is more like the Calebar than it is to the Kerrapay, and the Calbra is 
the Calebar than is the Karaba. 
Finally, the Bongo is a name of the Old Calebar river ; whilst the Bongo 
thr^ particularly referable to the Gaboon languages, especially 
English, 
wie 
tm 
four 
jke 
ieren 
nine 
ten 
Karaba. 
Kerrapay. 
Old Calebar. 
ket 
eddoe 
ket. 
uha 
effeu 
ebah. 
ita 
eltong 
etah. 
ina 
ennay 
enang. 
itien 
altong 
etune. 
itiaket 
ad day 
eteoget. 
itiuba 
adrinnee 
eteawah. 
itiita 
ennee 
eteatah. 
itsoket • 
ijodu 
indee 
owoo 
unguet. 
dooab. 
riea Ukoho of Mrs. Kilham ,—Knowing no other vocabula- 
to titles, I class them with those dialects whoso locality has yet 
»es»Pf Probably tln-y are the languages of the northern or 
»t*tcd fh t ^ *• c- of the Warree country, of which it has been 
ties. »v certain vocabularies are known. Their ethnographical afiini- 
euapjp ^ collected from .Mrs. Kilham s tables, are with the Ian- 
th» ih general; but with the Karaba in particular. Besides 
t},.’ ^** MEcbein and a Boobles-Town in the district in question, which 
dialects would suit 
ilreadv « a specimen of the complication so often alluded to 
form rhJ language is called Ako; whilst words approaching the 
the „ are current for several of the dialects in these parts. Besides 
^l^^re are the Yebn dialects of the Yarriba, and the Bnbi of 
N 
