INTRODUCT ION.
The Publishers desire to place before the public a really easy Anglo-'raal Guide, that will allow the reader to acquire a fairly good idea of the language as spoke!). Practice on the spot will lead to the fuller acquisition, but sufficient information is contained in these pages to enable the reader to converse in the Taal dialect.
The spelling is that usually adopted, though there is no uniform practice in this respect, as a perusal of the works of the small numbe'r of Taal writers will show.
Concise without being complex, this little work will be found a useful primary guide.
Throughout the book all Taal and Dutch words are printed in italics.
A useful Anglo-Dutch vocabulary will be found at the end of the book.
Under the heading " LESSONS AT SIGHT" will be found an easy method of acquiring the know- ledge of the principal Verbs, Nouns, and Adjectives in sentence form.
The Publishers trust that the simple elementary manner in which the book is compiled, will be its chief recommendation.
london, 1003.