BY SIDNEY H. BAY. 
21 
Dalit Dusun 
Kadasan Dusun 
Tampassuk Dusun,.. 
Idaan, or Eriaan 
Lanunf 
According to Mr. 
Lanuns is Mindanao, 
in North Borneo, on 
east. 
(Called Dali Dusum by Crespigny),* * * § near 
Limbang. 
Kimanis Bay. 
Tampassuk River, north of Kimanis. 
Locality uncertain. 
Locality uncertain. (Rivers in North¬ 
west Borneo.) 
C. A. Bampfylde, the home of the 
in the Philippines. There are many 
the coast in Marudi Bay, and to the 
8. Buludupi. 
The Buludupi are scattered in the north-east of British 
North Borneo, their villages being found from the Sugut 
River, near Paitan Bay, on the north, to Tabnnak on the 
south. Vocabularies of two apparently different dialects 
are given by Treacher I and Montano. § 
4. Sulu. 
The Sulu language L| is properly the language of the 
Sulu Archipelago, between Borneo and the Philippines. 
As, however, it is spoken by a number of people in North¬ 
eastern Borneo, about Darvel Bay and the adjacent islands, 
including Balangan, and as far south as Cape Kanyongan, 
it is included in this notice of Borneo languages. 
V. Malay. 
Four varieties of Malay appear in Borneo, Those given 
in the Comparative Vocabulary represent the speech of 
Brunei and Sarawak. The first of these is characterized 
by a broader pronunciation ; a for e, o or au for u, with a 
slight difference in vocabulary. A vocabulary of Sambas 
Malay, collected by me in 1899, differed very little from 
that of Sarawak. The Malay of the books printed at 
Banjeraiasm appears to differ slightly from the ordinary 
Low Malay of Surabaya. 
* Proo. Roy. Geogr. Soe., 1872. 
f Also called Iranun and Iilanum. 
I Journ. Straits Br. Roy. Asiat. Soc., 1880. 
§ ‘ Rapport,’ 1885. 
'| Also called Solok, Solog, Soolo, Soeloe, Joloano. 
