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Encyclopedia > Astadhyayi
The title given to this article is incorrect due to technical limitations. The correct title is Ạṣtādhyāyī.

The Ashtadhyayi (Ạṣtādhyāyī) is the earliest known grammar of Sanskrit, and one of the first works on descriptive linguistics, generative linguistics, or linguistics altogether. It was composed roughly around 400 BC by the Indian grammarian Panini, and it describes the grammar of Sanskrit completely. Its mathematical structure has been compared to that of the Turing machine.


Panini's work had a phenomenal success, and later Indian grammarians were essentially reduced to the role of his commentators. His work is still used, or at least referred to, in the teaching of Sanskrit today.


Panini's grammar consists of several parts, of which the Ashtadhyayi contains the morphological rules:

The Ashtadhyayi consists of 3,959 sutrani or rules.


From example words in the text, and from a few rules depenting on the context of the discourse, additional information as to the geographical, cultural and historical context of Panini.


The rules

The first two sutras are transcribed thus:

1.1.1 vṛ́ddhir āT-aiC
1.1.2 aT-eṆ guṇáḥ

The capital letters and are so-called IT markers. The C and refer to Shiva Sutras 3 and 4, forming the pratyaharas aiC, eṆ, i.e. they denote the list of phonemes {ai, au} and {e, o} respectively. The T appearing in both sutras is also an IT marker: It is defined in 1.1.70 as denoting that the preceding phoneme is not representing a list, but a single phoneme, (but encompassing all supra-segmental features (accent, nasality)), i.e. āT and aT represent {ā} and {a} respectively. The interpretation of the two sutras is thus:

1.1.1: the technical term vṛ́ddhi denotes the phonemes {ā, ai, au}.
1.1.2: the technical term guṇa denotes the phonemes {a, e, o}.

I.e. they are definitions of terminology: guṇa and vṛ́ddhi are the terms for the full and the lenghtened ablaut grades, respectively.


See also



  Results from FactBites:
 
Amazon.co.uk: Astadhyayi: Books (316 words)
Astadhyayi by Panini and S.C. Vasu (Hardcover - Jun 1996)
The anga, pada, bha, and samhita rules in the Astadhyayi by Niranjan Pati (Unknown Binding - 1999)
The Astadhyayi of Panini by Rama Nath Sharma (Hardcover - 1987)
The Astadhyayi of Panini (Vol.VIII) (580 words)
If it is accepted that Panini was the author of the Astadhyayi in the sense that he invented and developed the grammatical system on which the Astadhyayi is based, the question may be asked whether Panini was the author of the Astadhyayi as know it.
This question is to be decided on the basis of inconsistencies in the present text of the Astadhyayi.
Editors of this work assume that Panini was not the author of the Astadhyayi in the form in which we know it.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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