158 THE SUBANU. 
X. SO. 
SO 114 so—boto 115 OS-SO 104 O-Sa 103 
; lep-so 100 WwoO-SiO 90 
o-buna 41 
xi. to. 
to-a 78 sobo-to 115 
to-wa 79 jo-ser 23 
to-—wale 80 
xii. ko. 
ko-puna 38 sa-go 46, 47 | koi-tan 63b ta-gogi 59 
Xiii. tu. 
tu-kse 82 sa-tu 110 tu—wel 86 
tu-wa 83 ndu-a 8 
tu—wal 84 hu 19 
tu-—wale 85 
xiv. ku. 
ku-sa 99 
XV. Wa. 
wa-sa I17 te-—wa 72 tu-wal 84 
wal 89 to—wa 79 tu-—wel 86 
tu-wa 83 tu-—wale 85 
t—wa 87 
t—wag 88 ndu-a 
to-—wal 80 
xvi. bona. 
se—bona 51 a—-buna 11 e—bweuna 12 ko—puna 38 
ta—mona 57 tai-—mona 61 tai-monomon 62 a—ngaomo 10 
ka-ona 25 ka-una 20 ha—momo 17 kaita-mom 31 
xvii. miscellaneous. 
ke-sana 35 mai-sena 63d san 109 a-tan-ok 63a 
koi-tan 63b e-sega I5 ke-sega 36 sago 46, 47 
rega 43 tega 69 e-tega 63e kai-geda 29 
mai-sena 63d me-ke 39 sa—mosi 50 si-moksi 54 
e-—moti 13 sa-—angu 106 ta—gogi 59 iray 94 
joser 23 sago-kava 47 no-siuno 102 sembaow I12 
ya 73 
One form in the Polynesian area remains unexplained, Viti ndua. 
It is not wholly easy to arrive at a decision upon this point. Under- 
lying its Polynesian element of later settlement, Viti contains a large 
element of speech affiliated somewhat indefinitely in hither Melanesia. 
If we assume this mdua to belong to the Melanesian element we find it 
immediately associable with the tuwa-towa forms found in the Banks 
Group and adjacent northern New Hebrides. Yet in islands of the 
same region we encounter a tuwale form and in the present lack of infor- 
mation on these tongues we may not venture upon dissection. On the 
other hand the thirteenth item of the preceding tabulation will show 
