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1

St, Cartmail Keith. The art of Tonga =: Ko e ngaahi'aati'o Tonga. Honolulu: University of Hawaiʻi Press, 1997.

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2

Cartmail, Keith St. The art of Tonga =: Ko e ngaahi 'aati 'o Tonga. North Ryde, N.S.W: Craftsman House, 1997.

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3

Gregg, Tonya. Tonya Gregg: Exuberant boom. Ithaca, New York: Handwerker Gallery, Ithaca College, 2005.

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4

Gregg, Tonya. Tonya Gregg: Exuberant boom. Ithaca, New York: Handwerker Gallery, Ithaca College, 2005.

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5

Gutsa, Tapfuma. Tapfuma Gutsa's mulonga: Deep waters and starry skies : a celebration of Tonga culture and heritage. Zimbabwe?: Culture Fund?, 2012.

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6

Chong-mok, Yu, ed. Myŏngp'um 100-sŏn =: Dong-A University Museum hundred highlights. Pusan Kwangyŏksi: Tonga Taehakkyo Pangmulgwan, 2009.

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7

Kaeppler, Adrienne Lois. From the stone age to the space age in 200 years: Tongan art and society on the eve of the millenium. Nukuʻalofa, Tonga: Tongan National Museum, 1999.

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8

Pangmulgwan, Tonga Taehakkyo. Kukpo pomul: National treasure. Pusan Kwangyŏksi: Tonga Taehakkyo Pangmulgwan, 2010.

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9

1960-, Yang Xudong, ed. Shan shui qu tan. Beijing Shi: Zhonghua shu ju, 2010.

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10

Tong lu er xing you hua zhuan ji: Tongluerxing youhua zhuanji. Beijing Shi: Beijing gong yi mei shu chu ban she, 2004.

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11

Hou Yumei Man zu jian zhi ji. [Changchun Shi]: Jilin she ying chu ban she, 2005.

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12

Fengjiu, Chen, and Wang Quan, eds. Danyang tong jing qing ci bo wu guan: Qian jing tang. Beijing: Wen wu chu ban she, 2007.

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13

Fengjiu, Chen, and Zhang Yao, eds. Danyang tong jing qing ci bo wu guan: Qing ci zhai. Beijing: Wen wu chu ban she, 2007.

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14

Burley, David V., and David J. Addison. Tonga and Sāmoa in Oceanic Prehistory. Edited by Ethan E. Cochrane and Terry L. Hunt. Oxford University Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199925070.013.017.

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Tonga and Sāmoa are adjacent archipelagoes on the west central flank of the Polynesian triangle. These were the first islands to be settled in Polynesia, and they ultimately became the homeland from which islands in East Polynesia were colonized. Long held assumptions in regional archaeology suggest Tongan/Sāmoan culture histories are interwoven and homogeneous. This is only partly the case, as is illustrated in a review of regional archaeology including Lapita and Plainware ceramics, debates on the veracity of ancestral Polynesian society and homeland, on the political evolution and outcomes for chiefdom-level society, in archaeological data reflecting interaction, warfare, trade, and elite intermarriage as well as in traditional histories extending over a millennium. Research themes and critiques are structured and prioritized by personal perspectives of the authors.
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15

W, Scholl David, Vallier T. L, and Circum-Pacific Council for Energy and Mineral Resources., eds. Geology and offshore resources of Pacific island arcs--Tonga region. Houston, Tex., U.S.A: Circum-Pacific Council for Energy and Mineral Resources, 1985.

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16

Harpster, Steve. Pencil, Paper, Draw!: TONKA Diggers and Dumpers (Pencil, Paper, Draw!). Sterling, 2008.

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17

Bennardo, Giovanni. Cultural models in Tongan metacognition. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198789710.003.0013.

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This chapter is about a fundamental Tongan cognitive style or cultural model. What happens to an individual’s ego is not the focus of that individual’s attention. One focuses on an other-than-ego individual (or more than one individual, or a group) and the consequences of one’s behavior on that person. In other words, a point, i.e., a place, person, or event, is chosen in the field of ego—i.e., the spatial field, social field, or event field—and other points are put in relationship to the previously chosen one, either centripetally, i.e., toward it, or centrifugally, i.e., away from it. The chapter first illustrates the presence of such a Tongan mental construction in the domain of spatial relationships and then shows it repeated in other domains of knowledge, e.g., social relationships or social cognition. This finding led to the hypothesis of a fundamental role played by cultural models in metacognition.
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18

Otsuka, Yuko. Ergative–Absolutive Patterns in Tongan: An Overview. Edited by Jessica Coon, Diane Massam, and Lisa Demena Travis. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198739371.013.40.

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Tongan (Polynesian) shows ergative-absolutive (ERG-ABS) patterns in morphology as well as syntax, but the ERG-ABS pattern is not consistent throughout the language. Noun morphology shows a split between clitic pronouns and other types of nouns. In syntax, three phenomena show an ERG-ABS contrast: (a) relativization using the gap strategy is limited to ABS and ERG-relatives require resumption; (b) coordinate reduction applies only if the gap and the antecedent are in the same case, be it ABS or ERG; and (c) only ABS, but not ERG, can serve as the antecedent of the null SE anaphor. No single factor can account for all three of these phenomena and at least two of the three patterns are shown to be better viewed as PF-phenomena. The data suggest that syntactic ergativity should be understood as a construction-specific phenomenon rather than a language-specific property.
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19

Howells, Coral Ann, Paul Sharrad, and Gerry Turcotte. Note on Currency. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199679775.003.0003.

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UNLESS indicated, all dollar amounts are in the currency of the countries being discussed. In the Pacific, Kiribati, Nauru, and Tuvalu use the Australian dollar, while the Cook Islands, Niue, and Tokelau use the New Zealand dollar. Fiji has its own dollar, shifting from the pound in 1969. In the kingdom of Tonga, the pound was replaced by the pa’anga in 1967. Samoa moved from the New Zealand pound to a decimal system of tala and sene in 1962. Papua New Guinea operated with a local version of Australian pounds and shillings until independence in 1975, when it adopted a decimal system of kina and toea....
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20

Cochrane, Ethan E., and Terry L. Hunt, eds. The Oxford Handbook of Prehistoric Oceania. Oxford University Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199925070.001.0001.

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The prehistory of Oceania begins with the occupation of New Guinea over 50,000 years ago, up to the settlement of Aotearoa/New Zealand in the last 700 years. The Oxford Handbook of Prehistoric Oceania presents this history in regional overviews and debates through 21 chapters by leading archaeologists and scholars of allied fields. Chapters present the latest findings and future research directions on the New Guinea region and archipelagos from Vanuatu, New Caledonia, Fiji, Tonga, and Samoa in the western Pacific. Micronesia, East Polynesia, Hawaii, Aotearoa/New Zealand, and Easter Island are also discussed in individual chapters. Chapters on wider disciplinary issues summarize key points of method and theory in Oceanic archaeology, including the generation of explanations, building chronologies, linguistic prehistory, coastline evolution, settlement systems, and maritime migration.
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21

Bedford, Stuart, and Matthew Spriggs. The Archaeology of Vanuatu. Edited by Ethan E. Cochrane and Terry L. Hunt. Oxford University Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199925070.013.015.

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The more than 1,000-kilometer stretch of eighty-two inhabited islands comprising the Vanuatu archipelago is centrally situated in the southwest Pacific. These islands were first settled in the late Holocene by Lapita colonists as part of a rapid migratory event that travelled as far east as Tonga. Over three millennia Vanuatu has transformed into an extraordinarily diverse country both linguistically and culturally. The challenge to archaeology is to explain how such diversity has arisen. This chapter addresses a range of themes that are central to the definition and understanding of the timing and nature of initial settlement, levels of interconnectedness, cultural transformation and diversification, human impact on pristine environments, and impacts of natural hazards on resident populations. Vanuatu research contributes to regional debates on human colonization, patterns of social interaction, and the drivers of social change in island contexts.
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22

Xi, Li, and Lijiang Naxi Dongba wen hua bo wu guan., eds. Jin shen zhi lu: Naxi zu Dongba Shen lu tu = A road close to the gods : Dongba paintimg [sic] "The road to heaven" of the Naxi people = Kami ni chikazuku michi : Nashi zoku "Tengoku he no michi" Tonpa kaiga. [Kunming]: Yunnan mei shu chu ban she, 2001.

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23

Qiufang, Lin, and Guo li chuan tong yi shu zhong xin (Taibei, Taiwan), eds. Taiwan shou lu duo tian gong: Guo li chuan tong yi shu zhong xin kai mu zhan dao lan shou ce. Yilan Xian: Guo li chuan tong yi shu zhong xin, 2002.

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24

Binjie, Liu, and Xu Lijian, eds. Can lan Zhonghua wen ming.: Canlanzhonghuawenming. Guiyang Shi: Guizhou ren min chu ban she, 2006.

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