A Comparative Grammar of the Modern Aryan Languages of India: The noun and pronounTrübner, 1876 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 53
Page 27
... dialects possessing any originality , and striking out for themselves forms which are something more than mere colloquial and phonetic corruptions of Sanskrit . When they do begin to do so , they often leave the ancient path and go into ...
... dialects possessing any originality , and striking out for themselves forms which are something more than mere colloquial and phonetic corruptions of Sanskrit . When they do begin to do so , they often leave the ancient path and go into ...
Page 59
... dialects which possess that letter . In- stances of primary words , according to the view of the Indian grammarians , are the following ; though they seem to make into primaries , by deriving them from almost imaginary verbs , many ...
... dialects which possess that letter . In- stances of primary words , according to the view of the Indian grammarians , are the following ; though they seem to make into primaries , by deriving them from almost imaginary verbs , many ...
Page 83
... dialects , and do not require detailed notice in a work of this kind . § 18. The next class of secondary formations is that of adjec- tives denoting the possession of any article , or of any quality or tendency the former are called ...
... dialects , and do not require detailed notice in a work of this kind . § 18. The next class of secondary formations is that of adjec- tives denoting the possession of any article , or of any quality or tendency the former are called ...
Page 92
... dialects . G. लाज “ shame , ” लजाळु “ shamefast , ” “ bashful . ” G. ऊंघ “ sleep , ” ऊंघाळु “ drowsy . ” G. " word , " " loquacious , " also in a good sense " eloquent . " G. रेती “ sand , ” रेताळु ...
... dialects . G. लाज “ shame , ” लजाळु “ shamefast , ” “ bashful . ” G. ऊंघ “ sleep , ” ऊंघाळु “ drowsy . ” G. " word , " " loquacious , " also in a good sense " eloquent . " G. रेती “ sand , ” रेताळु ...
Page 115
... dialect of Hindi the terminations iâ and ud are added by the vulgar to all nouns , whether primary or secondary , without altering the meaning . Other cases , where there are apparently two suffixes , would be more accurately described ...
... dialect of Hindi the terminations iâ and ud are added by the vulgar to all nouns , whether primary or secondary , without altering the meaning . Other cases , where there are apparently two suffixes , would be more accurately described ...
Other editions - View all
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
Popular passages
Page 36 - Vol. I. Mythical and Legendary Accounts of the Origin of Caste, with an Inquiry Into its existence in the Vedic Age. Second Edition, re-written and greatly enlarged. 8vo. pp. xx. 532, cloth. 1868. 21».
Page 29 - Grey. — MAORI MEMENTOS : being a Series of Addresses presented by the Native People to His Excellency Sir George Grey, KCB, FRS With Introductory Remarks and Explanatory Notes ; to which is added a small Collection of Laments, etc. By CH. OLIVER B. DAVIS. 8vo. pp. iv. and 228, cloth. 12*.
Page 11 - Callaway. — THE RELIGIOUS SYSTEM OF THE AMAZULU. Part I. — Unkulunkulu; or, the Tradition of Creation as existing among the Amazulu and other Tribes of South Africa, in their own words, with a translation into English, and Notes.
Page 25 - EDKINS.— CHINA'S PLACE IN PHILOLOGY. An attempt to show that the Languages of Europe and Asia have a common origin.
Page 46 - Asa's Glossary to the Arda Viraf Namak, and from the Original Texts, with Notes on Pahlavi Grammar by EW West, Ph.D.
Page 7 - BEAL.— A CATENA OF BUDDHIST SCRIPTURES FROM THE CHINESE. By S. Beal, BA, Trinity College, Cambridge ; a Chaplain in Her Majesty's Fleet, &c.
Page 8 - THE LIFE OR LEGEND OF GAUDAMA, THE BUDDHA OF THE BURMESE. With Annotations. The Ways to Neibban, and Notice on the Phongyies or Burmese Monks. BY THE RIGHT REV.
Page 47 - Vols. XI. and XII. Select Specimens of the Theatre of the Hindus. Translated from the original Sanskrit. By the late HH Wilson, MA, FRS Third corrected Edition.
Page 8 - Bleek. — A COMPARATIVE GRAMMAR OF SOUTH AFRICAN LANGUAGES. By WHI BLEEK, Ph.D. Volume II Phonology. II. The Concord. Section 1. The Noun. 8vo. pp. xxxvi. and 322, cloth.
Page 31 - VEST-POCKET LEXICON. An English Dictionary of all except familiar Words, including the principal Scientific and Technical Terms, and Foreign Moneys, Weights and Measures ; omitting what everybody knows, and containing what everybody wants to know and cannot readily find. By Jabez Jenkins.