Guest guest Posted January 26, 2004 Report Share Posted January 26, 2004 Dear list members, While looking up a past passive participle in the dicitionary I noticed the following phenomenon. It appears that whenever a past passive participle of type root + "ta" is formed from a root ending in a short vowel + h , the past passive participle form either: 1. retains the short vowel and the termination is a unretroflexed double consonent. or 2. now has a long vowel plus a single consonent retroflexed termination. So we have: guh gUDha dah dagdha dih digdha duh dugdha druh drugdha nah naddha mih mIDha muh mugdha and mUDha !! rih rIDha ruh rUDha lih lIDha vah UDha sah sADha or sODha snih snigdha Is this in fact an invariable rule, and is it likely that the retroflex forms were a historical linguistic development from an earlier but now usually lost form of short vowel + non-retroflex ending. I.e. short vowel + gdha ----> long vowel + Dha at some point in time for these forms. Thanks, Harry _______________ Get a FREE online virus check for your PC here, from McAfee. http://clinic.mcafee.com/clinic/ibuy/campaign.asp?cid=3963 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 27, 2004 Report Share Posted January 27, 2004 INDOLOGY, "Harry Spier" <harryspier@H...> wrote: > > It appears that whenever a past passive participle of type > root + "ta" is formed from a root ending in a short vowel > + h , the past passive participle form either: > 1. retains the short vowel and the termination is > a unretroflexed double consonent. > or > 2. now has a long vowel plus a single consonent > retroflexed termination. The regular outcomes depend on whether h is a reflex of a P.I.E. palatovelar, plain velar or labiovelar aspirate. > So we have: > > guh gUDha > dah dagdha > dih digdha > duh dugdha > druh drugdha > nah naddha > mih mIDha > muh mugdha and mUDha !! > rih rIDha > ruh rUDha > lih lIDha > vah UDha > sah sADha or sODha > snih snigdha The h in guh-, mih-, muh-, rih-, ruh-, lih-, vah- and sah- goes back to a P.I.E. palatovelar aspirate. The h in dah-, dih-, duh-, and druh- goes back to a P.I.E. plain velar or labiovelar aspirate. I don't know about nah- or muh-. They must be irregular. > Is this in fact an invariable rule, and is it likely that the > retroflex forms were a historical linguistic development from > an earlier but now usually lost form of short vowel + non- > retroflex ending. > > I.e. short vowel + gdha ----> long vowel + Dha at some point > in time for these forms. The diacritics are too difficult to convey in email, so I made a picture file with a chart showing the stages involved, and uploaded it to the files section as "Sanskrit Past Participles". To simplify it I omitted accents. It begins with a chart showing my method of notation. David Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 27, 2004 Report Share Posted January 27, 2004 INDOLOGY, Valerie J Roebuck <vjroebuck@m...> wrote: > > Doesn't nah- go back to a different original aspirate as well? Yes, you're right. I was too tired last night to look it up, but I checked T. Burrow today, and he wrote that nah- 'bind' is from nadh-. David Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 28, 2004 Report Share Posted January 28, 2004 INDOLOGY, "wtsdv" <liberty@p...> wrote: > INDOLOGY, Valerie J Roebuck <vjroebuck@m...> > wrote: > > > > Doesn't nah- go back to a different original aspirate as well? > > Yes, you're right. I was too tired last night to look it up, > but I checked T. Burrow today, and he wrote that nah- 'bind' > is from nadh-. I couldn't last night, with my limited sources, find the root of ruh-, as my chart indicates with a question mark, but was today informed on the cybalist that it's from *leudH- 'grow up, ascend'. So ruh- is like nah- in this respect. David Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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