Kim, Hyung-Soo. 1999. Meinhof`s Rule in Bantu Revisited. Linguistics 7-2, 183-206. Well known to any Bantu phonologist is Meinhof`s Rule, a dissimilation phenomenon observed between two nasal compounds in successive syllables. This paper analyzes application of this rule in Chibemba, a Bantu language spoken in Zambia. Chibemba has been previously classified by Meeussen(1963) and Meinhof(1932) as one of those Bantu languages in which the dissimilation rule occurs under a more limited condition. It is argued that such restriction is unnecessary in light of the data presented by Mann(1977). It is shown that the application of Meinhof`s Rule in Chibemba occurs essentially under the same universal condition on dissimilation as in other Bantu languages, for example, Luganda. To place the analysis in proper context, I begin with discussion of Meinhof`s Rule as a dissimilation; its interpretation, the mechanism of change, and the rule`s condition and reflexes in Bantu languages. (Jeonju University)