A Comparative Grammar of the Modern Aryan Languages of India: The noun and pronounTrübner, 1876 - Indo-Aryan languages, Modern |
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Page 4
... 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 ; and if it be necessary to ...
... 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 ; and if it be necessary to ...
Page 6
... words of the early Tadbhava class , namely to words which have come down uninterruptedly from those times when 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 ...
... words of the early Tadbhava class , namely to words which have come down uninterruptedly from those times when 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 ...
Page 14
... words now given appear , from their phonetic structure , to be early Tadbhavas , as for instance , which exhibits ... words are all very common words in constant daily use , and as such should , according to the theory , have taken that ...
... words now given appear , from their phonetic structure , to be early Tadbhavas , as for instance , which exhibits ... words are all very common words in constant daily use , and as such should , according to the theory , have taken that ...
Page 15
... words which did not take the termination , more frequently than from those which did . § 6. Stems in -na and -ana . The former of these is in use only in a very small class of words , all of which , with one exception , are oxytone in ...
... words which did not take the termination , more frequently than from those which did . § 6. Stems in -na and -ana . The former of these is in use only in a very small class of words , all of which , with one exception , are oxytone in ...
Page 16
... words the accent is entirely neglected ; strangely the only word in which Panjabi and Sindhi exhibit oxytone termi- nations is precisely that one which is barytone in Sanskrit . It will be more convenient to take the feminines of this ...
... words the accent is entirely neglected ; strangely the only word in which Panjabi and Sindhi exhibit oxytone termi- nations is precisely that one which is barytone in Sanskrit . It will be more convenient to take the feminines of this ...
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Common terms and phrases
a-stem abstract nouns accent added adjectives affix anunâsika anuswâra Aryan barytone Bengali Bengali and Oriya Bhojpuri case-affixes case-endings causal Chand cloth common compound consonant dative declension derived from Skr dialect DICTIONARY Edited elided English examples existence F. J. FURNIVALL feminine final vowel formation genitive Gipsy GRAMMAR grammarians Gujarati Hindi India instances latter lengthened locative long â long vowel Ludgate Hill Marathi masc masculine meaning merely modern languages neuter nominative nouns ending numerous oblique form Old-H Old-Hindi origin Orissa Oriya oxytone Panjabi particles Persian phonetic plural possession Prakrit pratyaya primary stems probably pronoun rejected retain Royal Asiatic Society rule Sanskrit secondary semivowel sense seven languages sewed short vowel shortened Sindhi Sing singular substantive suffix syllable Tatsamas termination three genders Translation Trumpp verb Verbal root wife words ending को
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