No CrossRef data available.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 December 2009
page 394 note 1 While reading the proofs of these notes I receive Cerulli, 's Studi Etiopici IV: La Lingvo, Caffina, (published in Rome, Istituto per 1'Oriente, autumn 1951). This fundamental work of 661 pages places the study of Kafa on an entirely different footing. Cerulli's book (which will no doubt be the subject of a separate notice in due course) is divided into four parts: (1) Notes on the ethnic history of the Kafa; (2) The Kafa language (with phonetic as well as phonological features which will be of interest to linguists in general); (3) Texts; (4) Vocabulary.Google Scholar