A Practical Grammar of the Sanskrit Language: Arranged with Reference to the Classical Languages of Europe, for the Use of English StudentsClarendon Press, 1877 - 417 pàgines |
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Resultats 1 - 5 de 64.
Pàgina
... and quite recently of the Sakuntala , sufficiently supplies what is likely to be needed for the prosecution of the study of Sanskrit after the elements of Grammar have been acquired . a 3 Four indices instead of two have been appended . In.
... and quite recently of the Sakuntala , sufficiently supplies what is likely to be needed for the prosecution of the study of Sanskrit after the elements of Grammar have been acquired . a 3 Four indices instead of two have been appended . In.
Pàgina
... Four indices instead of two have been appended . In order to bring the present edition into harmony with the Greek and Latin grammars now in use , some of the grammatical terms have been altered , e . g . suffix has been substituted for ...
... Four indices instead of two have been appended . In order to bring the present edition into harmony with the Greek and Latin grammars now in use , some of the grammatical terms have been altered , e . g . suffix has been substituted for ...
Pàgina
... four Special tenses : Of group I. or verbs of the first , fourth , sixth , and tenth classes Of groups II . and III . - Preliminary observations . The new rules of Sandhi required for group II . Of group II . or verbs of the second ...
... four Special tenses : Of group I. or verbs of the first , fourth , sixth , and tenth classes Of groups II . and III . - Preliminary observations . The new rules of Sandhi required for group II . Of group II . or verbs of the second ...
Pàgina 2
... four or five hundred . The most common are given here . A more complete list will be found at the end of the volume . THE MORE COMMON CONJUNCT CONSONANTS . Дgl , kk , kt , ghr , or kr , kl , ☎ kv , ☎ ksh , nk , ♬ ng , ▽ ćć , a téh ...
... four or five hundred . The most common are given here . A more complete list will be found at the end of the volume . THE MORE COMMON CONJUNCT CONSONANTS . Дgl , kk , kt , ghr , or kr , kl , ☎ kv , ☎ ksh , nk , ♬ ng , ▽ ćć , a téh ...
Pàgina 10
... four vowels is supposed to have three prosodial lengths or measures ( mátrá ) , viz . a short ( hrasva ) , a long ( dírgha ) , and a prolated * That there is not , practically , much difference between the pronunciation of the vowel ri ...
... four vowels is supposed to have three prosodial lengths or measures ( mátrá ) , viz . a short ( hrasva ) , a long ( dírgha ) , and a prolated * That there is not , practically , much difference between the pronunciation of the vowel ri ...
Altres edicions - Mostra-ho tot
A Practical Grammar of the Sanskrit Language: Arranged with Reference to the ... Sir Monier Monier-Williams Visualització completa - 1877 |
A Practical Grammar of the Sanskrit Language: Arranged with Reference to the ... Sir Monier Monier-Williams Visualització completa - 1877 |
A Practical Grammar of the Sanskrit Language: Arranged with Reference to the ... Sir Monier Monier-Williams Visualització completa - 1877 |
Frases i termes més freqüents
1st Fut 2nd Fut 3rd pl 3rd sing adjectives adverbial affixed Anusvára Aorist Atmane Atmane-pada becomes Bhid Bhri bhú bibhri bodha bodha bodha budh cæsura Caus Causal stem changed ćinu compounds Cond conjugational declension Desiderative disa disa disa DUAL Dvandvas Dvigu ending in consonants feminine forming the stem Freq Future Greek Guna gunated Impf Impo Impv indeclinable inflexion initial inserted Latin lengthened letters masc nasal neut neuter nominal stem nouns nouns of agency nṛitya nṛitya optionally Pán Parasmai Parasmai-pada Passive Participle Past Indecl Past Pass Perf PLURAL Prec prefixed prepositions Pres Primitive verbs pronoun radical vowel reduplicated reject roots ending rule Sandhi Sanskrit semivowel Similarly sometimes special stems Special tenses substantives substituted suffix syllable tanu terminations udátta Veda verbs of cl Visarga vowel Vriddhi word yojaya yojaya yojaya
Passatges populars
Pàgina 373 - Let the student, therefore, distinguish between the infiinitive of Sanskrit and that of Latin and Greek. In these latter languages we have the infinitive made the subject of a proposition; or, in other words, standing in the place of a Nominative and an Accusative case often admissible before it. We have it also assuming different forms, to express present, put, or future time, and completeness or incompleteness in the progress of the action.
Pàgina 373 - We have it abo assuming different forms, to express present, past, or future time, and completeness or incompleteness in the progress of the action. The Sanskrit infinitive, on the other hand, can never be made the subject of a verb, admits of no accusative before 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...
Pàgina 374 - Bopp considers the termination of the infinitive to be the accusative of the auffix tu (458. Obs.), and it is certain that in the Veda other cases of nouns formed with this suffix in the sense of infinitives occur ; eg a dative in tone or tavai, as from han comes hantave, 'to kill ;' fir. anu-i, anvetave, 'to follow ;' fr. man, mantavai, 'to think :' there is also a form in tos, generally in the sense of an ablative ; eg fr.
Pàgina 374 - And as the object of the verb, it may be regarded as equivalent to an indeclinable substantive, in which the force of two cases, an accusative and dative,* is inherent, and which differs from other substantives in its power of governing a case. Its use as a substantive with the force of the accusative case corresponds to one use of the Latin infinitive ; thus, TTt( Tiff "sfljJH, ^-adllM, " I desire to hear all that," " id audire cupio," where '3Jti£ and audire are both equivalent to accusative cases,...
Pàgina 373 - Sansk rit infinitive, on the other hand, can never be made the subject of a verb, admits of no Accusative before 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 oases, an Accusative and Dative, is inherent and which differs from other substantives in its...
Pàgina 363 - Put in the Sermon to Scholars the brave maxim of the Code of Menu: "A teacher of the Veda should rather die with his learning than sow it in sterile soil, even though he be in grievous distress for subsistence.
Pàgina 330 - This class has no exact parallel in other languages. When two or more persons or things are enumerated together, it is usual in Sanskrit, instead of connecting them by a copulative, to aggregate them into one compound word. No syntactical dependence of one case upon another subsists between the members of Dvandva compounds, since they must always consist of words which, if uncompounded, would be in the same case. The only grammatical connexion between the members is that which would be expressed...
Pàgina 11 - German word baum, or like the ou in our. The consonants are generally pronounced as in English, but g has always the sound of g in gun, give, never of g in gin. S with the accent over it (s) has the sound of j in sure, or of the last s in session. SAKOONTALA PROLOGUE Benediction Isa preserve you ! he who is revealed In these eight forms by man perceptible — Water, of all creation's works the first; The fire that bears on high the sacrifice Presented...
Pàgina 198 - ... fr. tap) are regarded by native grammarians as Átmane verbs of cl. 4 *. Again, many roots appear in class 4 as Intransitive verbs, which also appear in some one of the other nine as Transitive. For example, yuj, ' to join,' when used in a Transitive sense, is conjugated either in cl.