The case in the Cape Town High Court was postponed until tomorrow by Judge John Hlophe after prosecutors said they needed time to formalise agreements on a number of admissions by the defence.
The accused 50-year-old woman has been on bail since March last year after DNA tests confirmed that the new girl at the school and a 17-year-old final-year student were in fact biological sisters.
Police were alerted after Zephany's parents became convinced the older girl was their missing baby.
The parents looked on from the public gallery as the alleged kidnapper sat emotionless in the dock.
Without knowing it, the Nurse family had been living within a couple of kilometres of their kidnapped daughter, while celebrating her birthday every year and never giving up hope of finding her.
Zephany, who was renamed by her new family, is now approaching her 19th birthday after reportedly being raised with love and kindness by the accused woman and her husband, who she believed were her real parents.
The accused woman cannot be named, as that would reveal Zephany's identity after she was kidnapped.
In a statement read on her behalf by a lawyer shortly after Zephany discovered the truth about her past, she said: "I want to say thank you to all the people who supported me through this, for continuously praying and never giving up on looking for me.
"Under the circumstances I am doing fine."
Her biological parents told reporters at the time that their joy at finding her overwhelmed any desire for revenge.
She has been free on bail on condition that she does not contact potential state witnesses -- including her husband and Zephany.
She faces a minimum of five years in jail if convicted of kidnapping, but prosecutors had indicated earlier that they could be open to a plea bargain after consultations with both sides.
