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* This research was supported by ESRC grant R000275283. I am grateful to Roger Blench and Kay Williamson for discussion of many of the ideas presented here and to the Leipzig Congress audience for comments and discussion at the oral presentation of this paper.

[1] Endresen's work compares Nizaa with Proto-Bantu, and leads him to call it a Bantu language. It is not entirely clear whether he would want to call it Narrow Bantu, or indeed whether he accepts the distinction of Narrow Bantu from other Bantu groups as justified.

2 In Connell (1996) these two clusters (East and West, respectively) were referred to as `bundu' and `bor', the word for `dog' from each being used to illustrate a word structure difference between the two clusters.

3 The phonemicization is tentative: in some lects it is clearly in contrast with C2 /r/ and /l/, while in others this is not certain.

[4] In Williamson (1973) it is considered cognate with roots found widespread outside the Mambila area, e.g. Efik ; this seems unlikely.

[5] Obviously the evidence of such morphological processes degrades with time and may not be readily recoverable.

[6] If not of recent origin, then of recent ascendency. Roger Blench (personal communication) suggests a Nilo Saharan (Kanembu) origin, though Fulfulde is another possibility, and the Proto-Bantu Cl 2 prefix has also been suggested (Kay Williamson, personal communication).



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About the Ethnographics Gallery

The Ethnographics Gallery is a project of the Centre for Social Anthropology and Computing. It is the direct descendent of the oldest online resource for Anthropology, dating to 1986. While we are giving the Gallery a face lift, please remember there are 20 year old pages within these halls.

We have no funding stream for this site, and so little time to maintain older material so it well may have a bit of a museum effect. Newer material will be appropriately wizzy.


What is the Ethnographics Gallery?

The Ethnographics Gallery is a publication of the Centre for Social Anthropology and Computing. This site contains reports on CSAC research, Teaching materials, and Resources that can be used for planning and executing research, including bibliographic materials, databases of ethnographic material, fieldnotes, descriptors, and software for working with ethnographic data. Suggestions always welcome, but we have no funding stream for this website. It contains materials created since 1986, and many of them are rather unfashionable by today's standards. We do, however, want everything to work! mail suggestions to csac@kent.ac.uk

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History

Our first internet service was begun in November, 1986, followed by our first web site in May, 1993, one of the first 400 web sites. The Ethnographics Gallery was founded in Feburary 1994. Our mission at that time was to provide a forum for anthropologists on the internet, and we helped to launch a number of organisations into cyberspace. Today, we are mostly concerned with novel forms of online publishing, disseminating our research, promoting learning resources, and disseminating information about using computers in anthropological research.

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