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Encyclopedia > Dhatupatha

The Dhatupatha (dhatupatha) is a lexicon of Sanskrit verbal roots subservient to the Ashtadhyayi grammar by Panini. It is organized by the ten present classes of Sanskrit, i.e. the roots are grouped by the form of their stem in the present tense.


The ten present classes of Sanskrit are:

1. bhūv-ādayaḥ (thematic presents)
2. ad-ādayaḥ (root presents)
3. ju-ho-ti-ādayaḥ (reduplicated presents)
4. div-ādayaḥ (ya thematic presents)
5. su-ādayaḥ (nu presents)
6. tuda--ādayaḥ (thematic presents)
7. rudh-ādayaḥ (n-infix presents)
8. tan--ādayaḥ (no presents)
9. krī-ādayaḥ (ni presents)
10. cur-ādayaḥ (aya presents, causatives)

  Results from FactBites:
 
Dhatupatha - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (80 words)
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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.
sanskrit Digest, Vol 18, Issue 27 (2242 words)
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.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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