DSpace Community:
https://hdl.handle.net/2440/75552
2024-03-28T18:28:58ZSeries IV, Section 13: Names of natives - women arrived with train, April 4 or 5.
https://hdl.handle.net/2440/76992
Title: Series IV, Section 13: Names of natives - women arrived with train, April 4 or 5.
Abstract: List of names of native women arriving by train, April 4-5 (2 copies)2013-04-17T00:00:00ZSeries IV, Section 12: List of native names and vocabulary written on old envelopes and scraps of paper.
https://hdl.handle.net/2440/76991
Title: Series IV, Section 12: List of native names and vocabulary written on old envelopes and scraps of paper.
Abstract: Genealogies, vocabulary, Christmas activities, lists of names.2013-04-17T00:00:00ZSeries IV, Section 8: Vocabulary book - printed book filled in, in manuscript - Broome area, plus 2 ms p.
https://hdl.handle.net/2440/76990
Title: Series IV, Section 8: Vocabulary book - printed book filled in, in manuscript - Broome area, plus 2 ms p.
Abstract: Printed book of Billingi’s dictionary; Paper scraps with manuscript notes in pencil and ink. Questions in Billingi’s book – manuscripts and typescript about customs and places and miscellaneous vocabulary from N.W. Australia (Beagle Bay, Fitzroy River, Roebourne, Nullagine and Broome area, W.A.), further specified in manuscript as Billingi’s vocabulary or dictionary of the Broome area dialect, N.W. Australia 1901-2. “This Jookan or Ngoombal ngangga (speech) to be held (kept together) with the Abbots Ambrose and Alphonse’s dictionary in French of the Beagle Bay Trappist Mission Groups 1890-1900. The dictionary is in French and Nyool – nyool, a language closely related to Billingi’s.”2013-04-17T00:00:00ZSeries IV, Section 6: Mulgarongu's vocabulary - Central Australia.
https://hdl.handle.net/2440/76873
Title: Series IV, Section 6: Mulgarongu's vocabulary - Central Australia.
Abstract: Mulgarongu’s vocabulary lists: Man, his relationships, etc.
Note on stapled booklet copy of this vocabulary: “This will carry philologists and anthropologists through the whole of the Central area from the Bight northward and from Eucla area eastward towards Fowlers Bay, South Australia, as the Central remnants come from all these areas. The different terms in my vocabulary are examples of the varying dialects”2013-04-12T00:00:00Z