Nalopȧkhyȧnam |
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Page iii
... FOLLOWED BY A VOCABULARY IN WHICH EACH WORD IS PLACED UNDER ITS ROOT , WITH REFERENCES TO DERIVED WORDS IN COGNATE LANGUAGES , AND A SKETCH OF SANSKRIT GRAMMAR . BY THE REV . THOMAS JARRETT , M.A. TRINITY COLLEGE , REGIUS PROFESSOR OF ...
... FOLLOWED BY A VOCABULARY IN WHICH EACH WORD IS PLACED UNDER ITS ROOT , WITH REFERENCES TO DERIVED WORDS IN COGNATE LANGUAGES , AND A SKETCH OF SANSKRIT GRAMMAR . BY THE REV . THOMAS JARRETT , M.A. TRINITY COLLEGE , REGIUS PROFESSOR OF ...
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Page iii - Nalopakhyanam, or, The Tale of Nala ; containing the Sanskrit Text in Roman Characters, followed by a Vocabulary in which each word is placed under its root, with references to derived words in cognate languages, and a sketch of Sanskrit Grammar. By the Rev. THOMAS JARRETT, MA , Trinity College, Regius Professor of Hebrew, late Professor of Arabic, and formerly Fellow of St Catharine's College, Cambridge.
Page 151 - The active is formed by adding vas to the inflective base, as it occurs before the terminations of the dual and plural numbers of the second preterite.
Page 151 - Middle is formed by adding àna to the same termination ; but when, as in the first, fourth, sixth, and tenth conjugations, the inflective base ends in a, then màna is added for the participle.