A Higher Sanskrt Grammar for the Use of Schools and Colleges

Portada
Náráyen & Company, 1898 - 750 pàgines

Des de l'interior del llibre

Pàgines seleccionades

Altres edicions - Mostra-ho tot

Passatges populars

Pàgina ii - Those great sages observed carefully the facts of their language and endeavoured always to connect them together by a law or rule and to bring these laws again under still more general laws. Sanskrit Grammar has thus become a science at their hands, and its study possesses an educational value of the same kind as that of Euclid and not much inferior to it in degree. For, to make up a particular form the mind of the student has to go through a certain process of synthesis.
Pàgina 414 - ... idea of acting, behaving or becoming like the person or thing expressed by the noun; and at others they yield the sense of desiring or wishing for the thing expressed by the noun. These will be arranged here under four head*, according to the affixes by which they are derived.
Pàgina 124 - In a compound, as a general rule, words are simply joined together, without any relation between the component parts being actually expressed ; the whole compound word has the power to express the various relations that exist between the several parts. The last word only takes the case termination required by its grammatical position in a sentence, the remaining words ( those ending in a consonant ) generally assuming their crude forms before the consonantal case terminations ; eg fiT^+3W=f3B[arjr:...
Pàgina 414 - Those ate not very much in common use and are generally used in the Present Tense. They have various meanings. They sometimes convey the notion of performing, practising, or using, or treating like the thing or quality expressed...
Pàgina 551 - ... 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 iv - Sanskrt grammar as fully and as conscisely as possible the author hopes the public will take an indulgent view of the work, and pardon him for any of the inaccuracies, mistakes of typography, &c. that might have crept in notwithstanding his best care. It is a sufficient excuse for these to say that the whole volume was written and carried through the press in less than a year. Before concluding I have also to thank Mr.
Pàgina 507 - lthough jmq^ alone would govern the Dative. § 796. The Nominative, as in English and other languages is simply the naming case; its office, when used by itself, is to express the crude form of a word, gender, measure and number and nothing more.* When used with a verb it forms its subject.
Pàgina 2 - Tliesn express nearly every gradation of sound, and every letter stands for a particular and invariable sound. Note: -This explains why there are no names, as in Greek, for the different letters of the alphabet. * Thus given by...
Pàgina 208 - In this chapter we will treat of the more general secondary nominal bases formed by means of the Taddhita affixes, reserving for a future chapter the formation of the primary nominal bases derived by means of the Krt affixes from roots. § 338. The Taddhita affixes are added in various senses. They occasion various changes in the words to which they are added.
Pàgina 506 - Karaka is the name given to the relation subsisting between a noun and a verb in a sentence. The plain meaning of the word is any factor which contributes to the accomplishment of an action, ^TTftftfa' ^TH^JT — ferrfrf'TTTcfiT'C^r.

Informació bibliogràfica