A Comparative Grammar of the Modern Aryan Languages of India: The noun and pronounTrübner, 1876 - Indo-Aryan languages, Modern |
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Page viii
... seven languages § 31. Typical terminations of the adjective § 32. Terminations of the masculine § 33. Terminations of the feminine § 34. Terminations of the neuter . • § 35. Formation of feminines from masculines § 36. Gender of words ...
... seven languages § 31. Typical terminations of the adjective § 32. Terminations of the masculine § 33. Terminations of the feminine § 34. Terminations of the neuter . • § 35. Formation of feminines from masculines § 36. Gender of words ...
Page 2
... 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 more than slight and doubtful indications of their presence still ...
... 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 more than slight and doubtful indications of their presence still ...
Page 4
... seven languages took over these words ready made , and , as far as we are concerned therefore , they may be regarded as primitive words . Only such suffixes will here be introduced as have left traces in the speech of the present times ...
... seven languages took over these words ready made , and , as far as we are concerned therefore , they may be regarded as primitive words . Only such suffixes will here be introduced as have left traces in the speech of the present times ...
Page 15
... seven languages , which seem as a general habit to be more faithful to the barytone accent , especially in substantives , than they are to the oxytone , or , if we accept the theory , to be derived from words which did not take the ...
... seven languages , which seem as a general habit to be more faithful to the barytone accent , especially in substantives , than they are to the oxytone , or , if we accept the theory , to be derived from words which did not take the ...
Page 18
... seven languages the functions of an infinitive . Thus from Skr . करणं “ the act of doing , ” H. करना " to do , ” P. करना , S. करणु , M. करणें . It is unnecessary to multiply instances , as every verb in each of ...
... seven languages the functions of an infinitive . Thus from Skr . करणं “ the act of doing , ” H. करना " to do , ” P. करना , S. करणु , M. करणें . It is unnecessary to multiply instances , as every verb in each of ...
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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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