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Topic: Dhatupatha


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In the News (Fri 4 Dec 09)

  
  Dhatupatha - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Dhatupatha (dhatupatha) is a lexicon of Sanskrit verbal roots subservient to the Ashtadhyayi grammar by Pāṇini.
It is organized by the ten present classes of Sanskrit, i.e.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Dhatupatha   (80 words)

  
 sanskrit Digest, Vol 18, Issue 27
Nearly all the n-starting verb roots we know are listed in the dhAtupATha (the standard dictionary of verb roots) beginning with a "N".
Thus pra+namati = praNamati pra + nashhTAste = praNashhTAste This influence is the same whether the verb-root is in "verbal" form or in "samAsa" form.
As you can see, except for the first two, most of these are very rare.
www.mail-archive.com /sanskrit@cs.utah.edu/msg00298.html   (2242 words)

  
 No subject
This study comes from the introduction to 'DhAtupATha; The Roots of Language' by Stephen Hill and Peter Harrison published by Duckworth.
I have abbreviated some of it and paraphrased at other times in order to simplify the process for those members not previously aware of such a process of study.
Words as we use them are a compound of suffixes and prefixes….just like our egos…….and the dhAtu which is the part of the word stripped bare of additions, pratyaya.
lists.advaita-vedanta.org /archives/advaita-l/2005-January/003939.html   (1310 words)

  
 Introduction : The Indus Language
For many of us, this rule is uncalled for, because there is no verb like SThA, Saha, Nama in our Sanskrit dictionaries.
But Panini had before him a Dhatupatha with SThA, Nama, etc. which he did not venture to redraft or tamper with.
This root-list was coming to him from the ancestors of Sanskrit which evidently did have SThA, Nama, etc. Because they were in the genealogical line of Sanskrit, these were acceptable to the Sanskrit grammarians, even though not usable in those forms in Sanskrit.
www.indusscript.com /introduction.html   (1605 words)

  
 sanskrit Digest, Vol 22, Issue 3
either gives churAdi For (1) bhU is just so in the dhAtupATha, hence bhvAdi So there is no particular breach of naming rules.
I have made up a weak and debatable explanation for 'juhoti' (I have no proof whatsoever): There could be confusion with another dhAtu -- But I could not find any other dhAtu hu/hU in the dhAtupATha.
The closest is hve (to call out OR challenge).
www.mail-archive.com /sanskrit@cs.utah.edu/msg00397.html   (1506 words)

  
 Booksformind Books Books on India Indian Books Online Book Store   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Ashtadhyayisutrapatha (With Vartikas, Ganas, Dhatupatha, Paniniya Siksha, Paribhashapatha and Sutra Index: Introduction Dr. Ratna Basu), online books
Ashtadhyayisutrapatha (With Vartikas, Ganas, Dhatupatha, Paniniya Siksha, Paribhashapatha and Sutra Index: Introduction Dr. Ratna Basu)
Sanskrit Manual: A Quickreference Guide to the Phonology and...
www.booksformind.com /books.php?id=27844   (135 words)

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