Citations:Chasu

Bantu language sometimes alternatively called Asu

 * 1984, Joan Maw, David J. Parkin, Swahili Language and Society: Papers from the Workshop Held at the School of Oriental and African Studies in April 1982, page 321:
 * The North Pare range was the traditional homeland of speakers of Kigweno, a language with close affinity to Kichagga. The clans of South Pare spoke Chasu, often claimed to be intelligible with the Taita language. Within South Pare, several
 * 1991, Isaria N. Kimambo, Penetration & protest in Tanzania: the impact of the world economy, page 173:
 * would at least see the following three symbols: the highland homeland, the Chasu language, and the lifelong experience in ritual.
 * 1998, Abel Yamwaka Mreta, An analysis of tense and aspect in Chasu
 * 2009, Gary Land, The A to Z of the Seventh-Day Adventists, page 291:
 * Kotz subsequently reduced the Chasu language to writing and published a grammar and a translation of the book of Matthew.

Bantu language sometimes alternatively called Asu

 * 1964, Ernst Kotz, Grammatik des Chasu in Deutsch-Ostafrika (Pare-Gebirge)