Grammar and Vocabulary of the Lau Language by Walter G. Ivens
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Transcriber's Note: Some umlauts and other fine distinctions
of Sa'a orthography have been lost. The Lau orthography is correct as given. GRAMMAR AND VOCABULARY OF THE LAU LANGUAGE: SOLOMON ISLANDS BY WALTER G. IVENS, M. A., LITT. D. CARNEGIE INSTITUTION OF WASHINGTON PUBLICATION NO. 300 PREFACE. Lau is the name given to the language spoken by the inhabitants of the artificial islets which lie off the northeast coast of Big Malaita, Solomon Islands. The language spoken on the coast from Uru on the northeast to Langalanga, Alite Harbor, on the northwest of Big Malaita, is practically Lau. On the west coast there is considerable admixture of Fiu, which is the language of the bush behind the Langalanga lagoon. In Dr. Codrington's "Melanesian Languages," pp. 39 et seq., certain words are given as spoken at Alite in Langalanga. These words are probably Fiu rather than Lau. |
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