19.06.2013 Views

dictionary of sanskrit grammar

dictionary of sanskrit grammar

dictionary of sanskrit grammar

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

s <strong>grammar</strong>ian <strong>of</strong> the seventeenth<br />

century who wrote a treatise<br />

on <strong>grammar</strong> named Saiavali, and<br />

a treatise on roots named Dhatu-<br />

parayana.<br />

necessary intervention; cf,<br />

p statement which is looked upon<br />

. as a general statement <strong>of</strong> the nature<br />

<strong>of</strong> Paribhasa occurring in the Maha-<br />

bha§3'a on P. VII. 2.3.<br />

«n?f elision, the word is used in <strong>grammar</strong><br />

as a synonym <strong>of</strong> ' lopa<br />

a place in the nose where<br />

a nasal letter such as s*., 01.,<br />

or and anusvara get a tinge <strong>of</strong><br />

nasalization while passing through<br />

it. The yama letters e.g. the nasal<br />

ii, % % get nasalization in the<br />

utterance <strong>of</strong> the words qfsfer:,<br />

=qw ii:3 s?f5g:, ssff?a; cf. qift ;nir qtf:<br />

snfcRIHj^ irfes: s . K. on P. V III. 2.1.<br />

cf. also zRigsTisnfeqwi V. Pr.<br />

I. 74, R. T 12.<br />

letters or phonetic elements<br />

produced in the nose; cf.<br />

R. T. 12. See<br />

( ) =<br />

apparent disappearance by<br />

withdrawal into the primary cause,<br />

cf. Vak. pad. III. 1.38. cf. also<br />

sfer 3rg%m<br />

STT^ft *T 1 1 =Ef<br />

fg ^ r:<br />

\ ( H ela.)<br />

^ ( 1 ) personal ending substituted<br />

for ft ( faq,) <strong>of</strong> the 1st pers. sing, in<br />

the imperative ; (2 ) a technical<br />

term in the Jainendra Vyakarana<br />

for the term <strong>of</strong> Panini.<br />

§1:53*53? not possessed <strong>of</strong> any number-<br />

sense; the term is used in connection<br />

with indeclinables; cf. arsqjjwRjj<br />

218<br />

Kas. on P. I. 4.21.<br />

deprived <strong>of</strong> Sarhdhi; without<br />

any euphonic combination or euphonic<br />

change.<br />

FfS augment f?[ as seen in the reduplicated<br />

syllable sRf^r <strong>of</strong> the aorist form<br />

<strong>of</strong> the root cf.<br />

ftqrrat I Kas. on<br />

P . V II. 4.65.<br />

PN ' -<br />

Tn^TTF a statement in the Vedic passage;<br />

a Vedic passage; sacred tradition or<br />

Vedic Literature in general; cf. the<br />

frequent expression fafir ftiTRl' ^IcT<br />

where ftjrtr means ‘ a vedic word,<br />

given as an instance ’; it also means<br />

‘ V ed a5 ; cf. f w i qm M. Bh.<br />

on V II. 2.64. Durgacarya says that<br />

the word is also used in the sense<br />

<strong>of</strong> * meaning ’ ; cf. era «§» IctoR*? i?JWT<br />

Nir. III. 9. Durgacarya has<br />

also explained the word as *rnqffcr<br />

ptfflfor fief those<br />

that make the hidden meaning <strong>of</strong><br />

the Mantras very clear.<br />

a kind <strong>of</strong> sound which apparently<br />

is made up <strong>of</strong> a combination <strong>of</strong><br />

three phonetic elements §;, ^ and<br />

«TIt^sj|. It is a peculiar sound through<br />

both the mouth and the nose, although<br />

no specific place <strong>of</strong> production<br />

is assigned to i t ; cf. Bjfq^wRT<br />

R. T, 11.<br />

I fWWfitWfSWT 3T<br />

a name given to a collection <strong>of</strong><br />

words which are mainly Vedic. In<br />

ancient times such collections were<br />

possibly very general and numerous<br />

and the works or treatises on derivation<br />

such as the Nirukta <strong>of</strong> Yaska<br />

were, based upon them ; cf.<br />

sHtnra; i wnnt s t 1 gtnicq<br />

?wii?q enraicrret m Hsst f?m-<br />

^fcpFqEf: | 31ft m 3Tjf*[-

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!