A Comparative Grammar of the Modern Aryan Languages of India: On soundsMunschiram Manoharlal, 1872 - 360 Seiten |
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Seite 5
... instances , look for it not in the writings in the popular dialects which have come down to us , but in Sanskrit ; and secondly , that although Pânini lived in an age when the early Aryan dialects had already undergone much change from ...
... instances , look for it not in the writings in the popular dialects which have come down to us , but in Sanskrit ; and secondly , that although Pânini lived in an age when the early Aryan dialects had already undergone much change from ...
Seite 18
... instances , and could not fail to be pronounced correctly . But the modern forms of these words were resuscitated by learned men from Latin authors where they occurred , just as the Pandits do and have done with Sanskrit words . In bor ...
... instances , and could not fail to be pronounced correctly . But the modern forms of these words were resuscitated by learned men from Latin authors where they occurred , just as the Pandits do and have done with Sanskrit words . In bor ...
Seite 41
... instances . The rules for the preparation of the base are most intricate in Sindhi , Gujarati , and Marathi , in the first of which Arabic words , as I have said , are very numerous . We cannot therefore take these words into ...
... instances . The rules for the preparation of the base are most intricate in Sindhi , Gujarati , and Marathi , in the first of which Arabic words , as I have said , are very numerous . We cannot therefore take these words into ...
Seite 42
... them , so that position in the sentence becomes once more the guide in many instances to the meaning of the individual word . Thus the English words of , to , in , for , etc. , correspond exactly to the Turkish in , lah 42 INTRODUCTION .
... them , so that position in the sentence becomes once more the guide in many instances to the meaning of the individual word . Thus the English words of , to , in , for , etc. , correspond exactly to the Turkish in , lah 42 INTRODUCTION .
Seite 48
... instances that those lan- guages which are most prone to the use of Tatsama words are also most backward in development . The most advanced language is the Hindi , which is closely followed by the Panjabi and Gujarati . In Hindi the ...
... instances that those lan- guages which are most prone to the use of Tatsama words are also most backward in development . The most advanced language is the Hindi , which is closely followed by the Panjabi and Gujarati . In Hindi the ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
accent ancient anuswâra appear Arabic Aryan aspirate assimilated becomes Bengali and Oriya Brahmans causal century cerebral Chand character class of words cloth combinations common compound connexion consonant corruption dental derived Devanagari dialects dictionaries Dravidian Dravidian languages early Tadbhavas Edited elided elision English examples exhibit existence F. J. FURNIVALL frequently GRAMMAR guages Gujarati Hindi India inflectional influence initial insertion instances Kutila labial Latin lengthening lingual long vowel Magadhi Maharashtri Marathi meaning mixed nexus modern languages nasal nexus non-Aryan nouns occurs Old H organic original Orissa Oriya oxytone palatal Pali Panjabi peculiarities perhaps Persian poems Prakrit Prakrit form probably pronounced pronunciation rejection retained root Royal Asiatic Society rule Sanskrit words Sauraseni semivowels seven languages sewed short vowel shortened sibilant Sindhi single consonant softened sound speech spoken syllable Tatsama tendency termination Urdu Vararuchi verb vulgar writing written دو
Beliebte Passagen
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