An Elementary Grammar of the Sanscrit Language: Partly in the Roman Character, Arranged According to a New Theory, in Reference Especially to the Classical Languages; with Short Extracts in Easy Prose. To which is Added, a Selection from the Institutes of Manu, with Copious References to the Grammar, and an English TranslationW. H. Allen & Company, 1846 - 260 pàgines |
Des de l'interior del llibre
Resultats 1 - 5 de 40.
Pàgina i
... given a list of about one hundred and forty Indian grammarians and commentators who have followed in the footsteps of the great Patriarch of Sanscrit Grammar , and endeavoured to throw light upon the obscurity of his aphorisms . In this ...
... given a list of about one hundred and forty Indian grammarians and commentators who have followed in the footsteps of the great Patriarch of Sanscrit Grammar , and endeavoured to throw light upon the obscurity of his aphorisms . In this ...
Pàgina iii
... given . Such an argument is unworthy of refutation , as proceeding from an utter ignorance of facts , and a stupid contempt for the authority of those eminent scholars , who have long since determined otherwise . To those who do not ...
... given . Such an argument is unworthy of refutation , as proceeding from an utter ignorance of facts , and a stupid contempt for the authority of those eminent scholars , who have long since determined otherwise . To those who do not ...
Pàgina iv
... given at the end of this volume . The style in all of these is plain , unaffected , and in perfect good taste ; and the amount of grammatical knowledge re- quired for their perusal might have been compressed into much less space than ...
... given at the end of this volume . The style in all of these is plain , unaffected , and in perfect good taste ; and the amount of grammatical knowledge re- quired for their perusal might have been compressed into much less space than ...
Pàgina vii
... given throughout this work , especially in the chapter on Verbs , will , it is hoped , conduce to the ready comprehension of the more complex . parts of the subject . They contain some novelties , which might require an apology , had ...
... given throughout this work , especially in the chapter on Verbs , will , it is hoped , conduce to the ready comprehension of the more complex . parts of the subject . They contain some novelties , which might require an apology , had ...
Pàgina ix
... given the benefit of his valuable advice and great experience . But whilst to him much of the merit is due that may belong to this book on the score of accuracy , it must be distinctly understood that he is entirely free from the ...
... given the benefit of his valuable advice and great experience . But whilst to him much of the merit is due that may belong to this book on the score of accuracy , it must be distinctly understood that he is entirely free from the ...
Altres edicions - Mostra-ho tot
An Elementary Grammar of the Sanscrit Language: Partly in the Roman ... Sir Monier Monier-Williams Visualització completa - 1846 |
An Elementary Grammar of the Sanscrit Language: Partly in the Roman ... Sir Monier Monier-Williams Visualització completa - 1846 |
An Elementary Grammar of the Sanscrit Language: Partly in the Roman ... Sir Monier Monier-Williams Visualització completa - 1846 |
Frases i termes més freqüents
1st fut 1st pret 2d fut 2d pret 2dly 3d plur 3d sing accusative adjectives adverbs affix ātm ATMANEPADA becomes bened Berkeley bhind bhū bodhi Brahman budh changed chinu chinw compound words conj conjugation conjugational tenses consonant dative declension declined dependent compound desiderative dhwam dual ending in consonants examples expressed feminine formation gender genitive Greek Guna Hitopadesha Imperative indeclinable Infin inflection initial inserted juhu juhw Latin lengthened Mahābhārata masc masculine nasal neut neuter nominative nouns of agency PARASMAIPADA passive verb plur plural prefixed prep prepositions pres present Preterite primitive verbs pronoun reduplicated rejected relative form roots ending rule Sanscrit Second Future Second Preterite semi-vowel sentence sometimes substantives syntax tanu terminations third preterite UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Vedas Visargah vowel Vriddhi अथ इति एव तु राजा
Passatges populars
Pàgina 42 - Let him say what is true, but let him say what is pleasing ; let him speak no disagreeable truth, nor let him speak agreeable falsehood ; this is a primeval rule. " Let him say ' well and good,' or let him say ' well ' only ; but let him not maintain fruitless enmity and altercation with any man.
Pàgina 43 - Single is each man born ; single he dies ; single he receives the reward of his good, and single the punishment of his evil, deeds." " When he leaves his corpse, like a log or a lump of clay, on the ground, his kindred retire with averted faces ; but his virtue accompanies his soul.
Pàgina 38 - ... 113. Even in times of dire distress a teacher of the Veda should rather die with his knowledge than sow it in barren soil. 114. Sacred Learning approached a Brahma#a and said to him: ' I am thy treasure, preserve me, deliver me not to a scorner; so (preserved) I shall become supremely strong.' 115. 'But deliver me, as to the keeper of thy treasure, to a Brahma#a whom thou shalt know to be pure, of subdued senses, chaste and attentive.
Pàgina 47 - The soul itself is its own witness; the soul itself is its own refuge: offend not thy conscious soul, the supreme internal witness of men! The sinful have said in their hearts, ' None see us.' Yes, the gods distinctly see them, and so does the spirit within their breasts.
Pàgina 43 - A WISE man should constantly discharge all ' the moral duties, though he perform not constantly * the ceremonies of religion ; since he falls low, if, ' while he performs ceremonial acts only, he discharge
Pàgina 47 - The fruit of every virtuous act which thou hast done, O good man, since thy birth, shall depart from thee to the dogs, if thou deviate from the truth.
Pàgina 197 - ... it, and can only express indeterminate time and incomplete action. Wherever it occurs, it must be considered as the object, and never the subject of some verb expressed or understood. As the object of the verb, it may be regarded as equivalent to a verbal substantive, in which the force of two...
Pàgina 202 - ... and that it is secreted by the coats of the stomach. Whether this be so or not there can be little doubt that it is often formed in great quantity in the stomach from the starchy principles of the food. It is possible that the secretion of lactic acid by the coats of the stomach may promote the conversion of the saccharine principles of the food into this substance.
Pàgina vii - Sanskrit, may be traced to the labour imposed, of thoroughly mastering these rules at the first entrance upon the study of the language. They form, as it were, a mountain of difficulty to be passed at the very commencement of the journey ; and the learner cannot be convinced that when once surmounted, the ground beyond may be more smooth than in other languages, the ingress to which is comparatively easy.