The Antananarvio Annual and Madagascar Magazine, 3. köide,9–12. numberLondon Missionary Society Press, 1885 |
From inside the book
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Page 2
... language can be traced to African sources . In the paper read by me in 1869 before the Anthro- pological Society of London on this subject , reference was made to various facts in support of the opinion that the Malagasy are related to ...
... language can be traced to African sources . In the paper read by me in 1869 before the Anthro- pological Society of London on this subject , reference was made to various facts in support of the opinion that the Malagasy are related to ...
Page 4
... language spoken of by Drury was probably only one of dialect , such as still exists among the various tribes . Mr. Dahle states that the unity of language must now be con- sidered as a tolerably well - established fact , in support of ...
... language spoken of by Drury was probably only one of dialect , such as still exists among the various tribes . Mr. Dahle states that the unity of language must now be con- sidered as a tolerably well - established fact , in support of ...
Page 5
... language , or a language closely related to it , and to have had the Malayan type of feature , which , how- ever , they lost or had much modified by mixture with the African element . Whether or not the peculiar physiognomy of the dark ...
... language , or a language closely related to it , and to have had the Malayan type of feature , which , how- ever , they lost or had much modified by mixture with the African element . Whether or not the peculiar physiognomy of the dark ...
Page 11
... language which entirely superseded and extinguished any pre - existing dialect that may have been spoken in the island . " The Malagasy approaches , however , most nearly to the Tagala of the Philip- pine Islands , but Von Humboldt ...
... language which entirely superseded and extinguished any pre - existing dialect that may have been spoken in the island . " The Malagasy approaches , however , most nearly to the Tagala of the Philip- pine Islands , but Von Humboldt ...
Page 12
... languages spoken by the fair races of Further India . " If that be true of the Malays of Java , it must be true also ... language by all the Malagasy tribes is therefore no proof that they are really one people , and still less that they ...
... languages spoken by the fair races of Further India . " If that be true of the Malays of Java , it must be true also ... language by all the Malagasy tribes is therefore no proof that they are really one people , and still less that they ...
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Common terms and phrases
Ambohimanga Andriamanitra Andrianampoinimerina Ankaratra ANNUAL Antananarivo appears Arabic basaltic belong Betafo Betsileo Betsimisaraka called Capital character chief chiefly Christian colour crater Dahle dialects Dictionary district Drury east coast English exists fanorona feet forest French gasy genera genus give given gneiss Government granite Hova hymns idols Ilahidama Imerina inhabitants interior island King known Komr lake large number lava living London Missionary Society Madagascar Malag Malagasy language Malagasy words Malay Malayan Malayo-Polynesian Mauritius means miles Mission Missionary Society native occurs origin peculiar perhaps pieces Polynesian present probably provinces Radama regard remarkable river Robert Drury Robert Drury's rock root rubrics Sakalava scholars seems seen Sibree side sikidy species Swaheli words syllable Tamatave tion trachyte trade translation tree tribes various vazaha Vazimba volcanic W. E. Cousins write
Popular passages
Page 19 - Modesty, with Seriousness, and with a religious Application of Events to the Uses to which wise Men always apply them, (viz.], to the Instruction of others by this Example, and to justify and honour the Wisdom of Providence in all the variety of our Circumstances, let them happen how they will.
Page 19 - Example, and to justify and honour the Wisdom of Providence in all the Variety of our Circumstances, let them happen how they will. The Editor believes the thing to be a just History of Fact...
Page 200 - A FEW more years shall roll, .£*- A few more seasons come, And we shall be with those that rest Asleep within the tomb.
Page 20 - The just application of every incident, the religious and useful inferences drawn from every part, are so many testimonies to the good design of making it public, and must legitimate all the part that may be called invention or parable in the story.
Page 60 - ... feet ; and there are also numerous extinct volcanic cones and craters. All round the island, but especially developed on the south and west, are plains of a few hundred feet elevation, formed of rocks which are shown by their fossils to be of Jurassic age, or, at all events, to belong to somewhere...
Page 204 - I roved at random thro' the town, And saw the tumult of the halls; And heard once more in college fanes The storm their high-built organs make And thunder-music, rolling, shake The prophets blazon'd on the panes; And caught once more the distant shout, The measured pulse of racing oars Among the willows; paced the shores And many a bridge, and all about The same gray flats again, and felt The same, but not the same; and last Up that long walk...
Page 144 - And if, as is probable, these opposite motions of the earth's crust usually take place in parallel bands, and are to some extent dependent on each other, an elevation of the sea bed could hardly fail to lead to the submergence of large tracts of existing continents ; and this. is the more likely to occur on account of the great disproportion that we have seen exists between the mean height of the land and the mean depth of the ocean. Keeping this principle in view, we may, with some probability,...
Page 18 - Pirates, being an account of the Famous Enterprises of Captain Avery, the Mock King of Madagascar, with His Rambles and Piracies, wherein all the Sham Accounts formerly publish'd of him, are detected.
Page 129 - This insular sub-region is one of the most remarkable zoological districts on the globe, bearing a similar relation to Africa as the Antilles to tropical America, or New Zealand to Australia, but possessing a much richer fauna than either of these, and in some respects a more remarkable one even than New Zealand.