The Antananarvio Annual and Madagascar Magazine, 2. köide,5–8. numberLondon Missionary Society Press, 1896 |
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Page 110
... Malay form of bellows ; and the practice of the brotherhood - by - blood custom ; to which is added the special affinity which the Malagasy language has to the languages classed together as Malayo - polynesian . With reference to these ...
... Malay form of bellows ; and the practice of the brotherhood - by - blood custom ; to which is added the special affinity which the Malagasy language has to the languages classed together as Malayo - polynesian . With reference to these ...
Page 111
... Pacific dialects from the parent language . This is consistent with the opinion expressed by the Rev. S. J. Whitmee in his edition of the Samoan gram- mar , that the Malayo - polynesian languages , together with those of the Indian ...
... Pacific dialects from the parent language . This is consistent with the opinion expressed by the Rev. S. J. Whitmee in his edition of the Samoan gram- mar , that the Malayo - polynesian languages , together with those of the Indian ...
Page 221
... Malayo - Polynesian , partly also to the Melanesian , which clearly indicates that there must have been an ... languages can be said to have been dealt with satisfactorily in all its details , enough has been done to justify the above ...
... Malayo - Polynesian , partly also to the Melanesian , which clearly indicates that there must have been an ... languages can be said to have been dealt with satisfactorily in all its details , enough has been done to justify the above ...
Page 223
... Malayo - Polynesian element has become the predominating one both in language and social influence , which certainly makes it most natural to suppose that the Malayo - Polynesians have been the conquerors , and the others the conquered ...
... Malayo - Polynesian element has become the predominating one both in language and social influence , which certainly makes it most natural to suppose that the Malayo - Polynesians have been the conquerors , and the others the conquered ...
Page 224
... Malayo - Polynesian elements . Being the conquer- ors and the superior race , they impressed their own stamp upon the language , just as did the Anglo - Saxons in England ; accepting , however , as did the Anglo - Saxons , a great many ...
... Malayo - Polynesian elements . Being the conquer- ors and the superior race , they impressed their own stamp upon the language , just as did the Anglo - Saxons in England ; accepting , however , as did the Anglo - Saxons , a great many ...
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Common terms and phrases
African Ambatondrazaka angatra animal ANNUAL Antananarivo appearance Arab Aye-aye Betsimisaraka birds called canoe Central Madagascar character charm chief church coast common Comoro connection consonants corymbs customs Dahle death demonstrative dialects dictionary east English European evil expressions fady feet Fiji flora flowers forest French frequently gascar genera give given hand head Hova hyphen Imerina and Betsileo Indo-European languages inhabitants instance island kind king known Lampung leaves Lemurs London Missionary Society Mada madagascariensis Malagasy language Malagasy words Malay Malayan Malayo-Polynesian languages manao Mauritius means Melanesian missionaries Native name noun origin passive person plants Polynesian possess prefix present probably pronoun Queen question Ranavalona regard remarks resemblance rice root Sakalava seems seen Seychelles Siamese Sibree Sihanaka species suffix supposed taken Tamatave Tambourissa Tanala things Thouars tree tribes tropical vazaha Vazimba verb village vowel whole
Popular passages
Page 153 - And a clean person shall take hyssop, and dip it in the water, and sprinkle it upon the tent, and upon all the vessels, and upon the persons that were there, and upon him that touched a bone, or one slain, or one dead, or a grave...
Page 394 - But earthlier happy is the rose distill'd Than that which, withering on the virgin thorn, Grows, lives, and dies in single blessedness.
Page 46 - And he spake of trees, from the cedar tree that is in Lebanon even unto the hyssop that springeth out of the wall: he spake also of beasts, and of fowl, and of creeping things, and of fishes.
Page 71 - ... Thin as reeds and frail as quills, apparently they were yet five or six feet tall, and were so constantly and vigorously in motion, with such a subtle, sinuous, silent throbbing against the air, that they made me shudder in spite of myself, with their suggestion of serpents flayed, yet dancing upon their tails. The description I am giving you now is partly made up from a subsequent careful inspection of the plant. My observations on this occasion were suddenly interrupted by the natives, who...
Page 209 - When thou goest, it shall lead thee ; when thou sleepest, it shall keep thee ; and when thou awakest, it shall talk with thee. For the commandment is a lamp; and the law is light ; and reproofs of instruction are the way of life: to keep thee from the evil woman, from the flattery of the tongue of a strange woman.
Page 41 - The individuality of the fauna of Madagascar," says Dr. Hartlaub, "is so unique that even that of New Zealand can hardly be compared with it. Wallace's attempted parallel between Madagascar and Africa and the Antilles and South America is, in our eyes, sufficiently disproved by the occurrence in the Antilles of Trochilidae, one of the most characteristic forms of South America. But in Madagascar not a single one of the genera most characteristic of Africa occurs. The originality of the fauna is much...
Page 104 - The names of the days of the week and the names of the months should begin with capital letters; as, Monday, June, v.
Page 135 - Eugmia with 500. And a point that must be prominently taken into account in estimating the general relations of the flora of Madagascar is that these large cosmopolitan genera are nearly all represented in the island. This holds good of all those that have been already mentioned ; and others of the same class that may be named in addition, of which two species or more are already detected in the island, are...
Page 75 - ... Cudjoe was joined, but at what period is unknown, though certainly after he had become formidable, by another tribe of negroes, distinct in every respect; . . . They were called Madagascars, but why I do not know, never having heard that any slaves were brought from the island of Madagascar. . . . They said that they ran away from the settlements about Lacovia, in the parish of St Elizabeth, soon after the planters had bought them. It does not appear that their number was great, but they were...
Page 71 - ... and the savage tenacity of anacondas fastening upon their prey. It was the barbarity of the Laocoon without its beauty— this strange horrible murder. And now the great leaves slowly rose and stiffly, like the arms of a derrick, erected themselves in the air, approached one another and closed about the dead and hampered victim with the silent force of a hydraulic press and the ruthless purpose of a thumb screw.