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[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
276 MALEKULA ' is not known, but it is interesting that Barang should also be the title of any man who has entered the Nelan Society in Lagalag} Layard reported that according to his informants banmg and Zoh were both words from Tomrnan Island,’ but as we have seen, Deacon states that the latter belongs to the dialect of Hurtes. We may perhaps infer, therefore, that banmg also is an Hurtes word, the grade name and title having been borrowed together. Whether Nam’ Mbimbamp, the degree whose title is Barang Telmbwir, is also one which has been introduced from this district to Seniang, there is nothing to tell us. N aari M bi/mgk is the name of a variety of cordyline, a plant which is, it seems, second only in ritual importance to the croton. Nimbimben is the word used to designate a type of armlet made of shell and string, of which there are several varieties which will be described later. The signiï¬Åcance of the titles Mwelip Mbon and Mwelip Sal is not certain ; Layard suggests that the latter‘ is a compound of liw, meaning " arrow", and sal, which he gives as the Word used for when children go about the bush shooting at anything that they can see, while mu/e he regards as probably a verbal particle.“ Deacon on the other hand saw a different derivation of the words, for opposite Mwelip Sal he noted, as though in translation, “ joined together~»double fruit Newt means “ the stone ", and this grade is in fact the ï¬Årst for which a stone and not a wooden image is set up. The title Vet Ndum seems to be a compound of vet, from meet, and the word mium which is used for the noise made when something falls ; Vetn Mbuas may possibly mean “ The Stone's Pig " or " The Pig's Stone The next grade, N aai M bimbarap, takes its name from the wooden image which the candidate sets up at entrance to it. Nahaimalal was translated “ Dance Again ", mial meaning “ back â€ù or " again", and hop or hav meaning “ dance ". No explanation was found for the alternative titles of this grade, nor for the name of the succeeding one, Neien M welip, though mien means " the earth â€ù, or “ the ground â€ù. As regards one of the titles, Telmbwir, of this degree, which is found also forming a part of the titles for Naai M bimbamp and Naamel, it is interesting to notice that it is the same as that borne by members of the l The Nolan of Lagalag is almost certainly an organintion which corresponds to the Nnlaunm of Seniang (q.v.).—C. H. W. ' Lay-ard, 1928, p. 1574 _ ‘ Layard, l928, p. 156.
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