A Grammar of the Teloogoo Language, Commonly Termed the Gentoo, Peculiar to the Hindoos Inhabiting the North Eastern Provinces of the Indian PeninsulaPrinted at the College Press, 1820 - 251 pages |
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Page 26
... nominative case singular of pure Teloogoo nouns denoting women , and terminating in , do not admit of Sundhi , when followed by a word commencing with an initial vowel . Being of the class named g∞ kululoo , such words assume ay as ...
... nominative case singular of pure Teloogoo nouns denoting women , and terminating in , do not admit of Sundhi , when followed by a word commencing with an initial vowel . Being of the class named g∞ kululoo , such words assume ay as ...
Page 29
... nominative singular do not adopt the Teloogoo termina- tions cɔ , w , or 5 , never admit of Sundhi ; thus , DoD , a swan , and which ? make grass , and Vishtnoo , and & which is the swun ? – durbha , a kind of sacred which ? make ...
... nominative singular do not adopt the Teloogoo termina- tions cɔ , w , or 5 , never admit of Sundhi ; thus , DoD , a swan , and which ? make grass , and Vishtnoo , and & which is the swun ? – durbha , a kind of sacred which ? make ...
Page 31
... the class termed kululoo , there is no clision or insertion of letters ; and per- mutation takes place in the following instances only . 109 110 111 112 113 Nouns in the nominative case , even OF THE CHANGE OF LETTERS . 31.
... the class termed kululoo , there is no clision or insertion of letters ; and per- mutation takes place in the following instances only . 109 110 111 112 113 Nouns in the nominative case , even OF THE CHANGE OF LETTERS . 31.
Page 32
Alexander Duncan Campbell. 111 112 113 Nouns in the nominative case , even when used accusatively , and all parts of the verb ending in & ,, and together with the words then , João now , dajɔɔ when ? preceding a word beginning with any ...
Alexander Duncan Campbell. 111 112 113 Nouns in the nominative case , even when used accusatively , and all parts of the verb ending in & ,, and together with the words then , João now , dajɔɔ when ? preceding a word beginning with any ...
Page 38
... nominative case , yet as all nouns and pronouns may be said to admit of inflexion , it may be laid down as a general rule , that when followed by postpositions , they cannot continue in the nominative case : by some of the postpositions ...
... nominative case , yet as all nouns and pronouns may be said to admit of inflexion , it may be laid down as a general rule , that when followed by postpositions , they cannot continue in the nominative case : by some of the postpositions ...
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Common terms and phrases
2d person accusative adjectives affirmative aorist AFFIRMATIVE VERB affixes beaten become bless Bramins Cadalu Cannadi cause to beat changing the final commencing common dialect conjugation connected form connected vowels consonants Crude Sanscrit nouns dative declension English expressed feminine gender Grammar Grammarians horse IMPERATIVE MOOD India INDICATIVE MOOD infinitive inflexion singular initial vowel inserted kululoo language letters lunar manner masculine means moon native negative aorist NEGATIVE VERB neuter nominative plural nominative singular noun or pronoun nouns denoting Paisachi particles past tense past verbal participle peculiar person singular plural postpositions preceding prefixed present tense present verbal participle pure Teloogoo Rama relative participle respecting root Royaloo rule Sanscrit derivatives Sanscrit words signifies sing sound Sundhi superior dialect syllable Tamil Telingana Teloogoo words Telugu Telugu Language third person Thou VERBAL NOUN Vishtnoo written చే చేత నా నీవు ను నేను ము యొక్క లో
Popular passages
Page 16 - He created twelve signs of the Zodiac, Aries, Taurus, Gemini, Cancer, Leo, Virgo, Libra, Scorpio, Sagittarius, Capricorn, Aquarius and Pisces and appointed them of four [several] humours, three, Aries, Leo and Sagittarius, fiery, Taurus, Virgo and Capricorn, earthy, Gemini, Libra and Aquarius, airy, and Cancer, Scorpio and Pisces, watery.
Page 22 - Brahmans they are profusely employed, more sparingly by the Sudra tribes. The Cannadi has a greater and the Tamil a less proportion of Tadbhavam terms than the other dialects; but in the latter all Sanscrit words are liable to greater variation than is produced by the mere difference of termination, for, as the alphabet of this language rejects all aspirates, expresses the first and third consonant of each regular series by the same character, and admits of no other combination of consonants than...
Page 22 - ... admits of no other combination of consonants than the duplication of mutes or the junction of a nasal and a mute, it is obviously incapable of expressing correctly any but the simplest terms of the Sanscrit ; all such, however, in this tongue are accounted Tatsamam when the alteration is regular and produced only by the deficiencies of the alphabet. But, though the derivation and general terms may be the same in cognate
Page 21 - Atsu-Telugu pure terms, constituting the basis of this language and, generally, also, of the other dialects of southern India: Anyadesyam terms borrowed from other countries, chiefly of the same derivation as the preceding: Tatsamam, pure Sanscrit terms, the Telugu affixes being substituted...
Page 18 - ... derivation is necessary to the Telugu. This pure native language of the land, allowing for dialectic differences and variations of termination, is with the Telugu, common to the Tamil, Cannadi, and the other dialects of southern India: this may be demonstrated by comparing the Desyam terms contained in the list taken by Vencaya from the Appacaviyam, with the terms expressive of the same ideas in Tamil and Cannadi. It has been already shewn that the radicals of these languages, mutatis mutandis,...
Page xix - that the declension of the noun by particles or words added to it ; the use of a plural pronoun applicable to the first and second persons conjointly ; the conjugation of the affirmative verb ; the existence of a negative aorist, a. negative imperative and other negative forms in the verb ; the union of the neuter and feminine genders in the singular, and of the masculine and feminine in the plural of the pronouns and verbs ; and the whole body of the syntax, are entirely unconnected with the Sanskrit.
Page xiii - ... a sum of not less than one lac of rupees in each year shall be set apart and applied to the revival and improvement of literature, and the encouragement of the learned natives of India, and for the introduction and promotion of a knowledge of the sciences among the inhabitants of the British territories in India...
Page i - Coromandel, inland to the vicinity of Bangalore, stretches northwards, along the coast as far as Chicacole, and in the interior to the sources of the Tapti; bounded on the east by the Bay of Bengal, and on...
Page 18 - ... thing; for, with the exception of some religious and technical terms, no word of Sanscrit derivation is necessary to the Telugu. This pure native language of the land, allowing for dialectic differences and variations of termination, is with the Telugu, common to the Tamil, Cannadi, and the other dialects of southern India...
Page 21 - Sans. a village), is not a constituent portion of the language, but is formed from the Atsu-Telugu by contraction, or by some permutation of the letters not authorised by the rules of grammar. The proportion of Atsu-Telugu terms to those derived from every other source is one half; of Anya-des'yam terms one tenth ; of Tatsamam terms in general use three twentieths ; and of Tadbhavam terms one quarter.