A Comparative Grammar of the Modern Aryan Languages of India: The noun and pronounTrübner, 1876 |
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Page 2
... Sanskrit noun no longer exist in their original form ; in some of the seven languages no trace of them is perceptible in the singular , and only weakened and half - obliterated traces remain in the plural ; in none of the languages are ...
... Sanskrit noun no longer exist in their original form ; in some of the seven languages no trace of them is perceptible in the singular , and only weakened and half - obliterated traces remain in the plural ; in none of the languages are ...
Page 3
... Sanskrit grammar , but only the simpler grammar of its modern descendants , it will not be necessary to consider all these suffixes in detail . They may be conveniently thrown into groups according to the vowel or syllables which they ...
... Sanskrit grammar , but only the simpler grammar of its modern descendants , it will not be necessary to consider all these suffixes in detail . They may be conveniently thrown into groups according to the vowel or syllables which they ...
Page 4
... Sanskrit grammarians , many may be dismissed as unconnected with the present subject , inasmuch as the stems formed by them were so formed before the rise of the modern languages , and the question of their construction is a matter not ...
... Sanskrit grammarians , many may be dismissed as unconnected with the present subject , inasmuch as the stems formed by them were so formed before the rise of the modern languages , and the question of their construction is a matter not ...
Page 6
... Sanskrit was spoken , and whose form depends on the ear , not on the eye . This is all that is claimed for it it is not pretended that the Sanskrit accent has been preserved in words resuscitated from the written language by learned men ...
... Sanskrit was spoken , and whose form depends on the ear , not on the eye . This is all that is claimed for it it is not pretended that the Sanskrit accent has been preserved in words resuscitated from the written language by learned men ...
Page 7
... Sanskrit ) suffix must explain to us why this , producing â = o , has been so capriciously employed , why , in fact , Skr . should not have taken a क and become Pr . ओट्ठओ , H. “ lip , ” ओंठा , " egg , " took and just as much ...
... Sanskrit ) suffix must explain to us why this , producing â = o , has been so capriciously employed , why , in fact , Skr . should not have taken a क and become Pr . ओट्ठओ , H. “ lip , ” ओंठा , " egg , " took and just as much ...
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Common terms and phrases
a-stem ablative added adjective affix anunâsika anuswâra Apabhranśa Arabic Aryan barytone becomes Bengali Bhojpuri Cambridge case-affixes case-endings case-particles Chand Chaucer Chinese cloth common compound consonant Crown 8vo dative declension deest Demy 8vo derived from Skr dialects DICTIONARY Edited English F. J. FURNIVALL feminine final vowel genitive Gipsy GRAMMAR Gujarati Hindi India inflected instances instrumental latter lengthened Linguistic Publications locative long â long vowel Ludgate Hill Marathi masc masculine meaning modern languages Nepali neuter nominative nouns nouns ending numerous oblique form Old-Hindi origin Oriya oxytone Panjabi particles Persian phonetic Prakrit probably pronoun Publications of Trübner rejected retain root Royal Asiatic Society Sanskrit semivowel seven languages sewed short vowel shortened Sindhi Sing singular stem substantive suffix syllable synthetical Tadbhavas Tatsamas termination Text three genders Translation Trumpp verb viii words को जो
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