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Sant Rajinder Singh Ji Maharaj Chair Professor, IIT-Madras.
Former Director, Karnataka Samskrit
University, Bangalore.
Former Head, Dept. of Sanskrit, The
National Colleges, Bangalore.
मूध्र्नि
This is not a trick question at all :) a sincere question.And also, if there are any real meaningful words that have 'r' followed by two consonants.
यदु॒परि॑ रकारचि॒ह्नं लि॒ख्यते॒ तेन॑ संयुक्ताक्ष॒राणा॒मपि॒ प्रागे॒व र॑का॒रो ज्ञा॑त॒व्यः॑। अतः॑। मू॒र्ध्नि = mūrdhní.मध्ये॑ श्रू॒यमा॑णो रका॒रो नि॑म्नचि॒ह्नेनै॒व लि॑ख्यते। यथा॑ कण्णमहोद॒येन॑ दर्शि॒तः। यथा॑ च॒ पित्र्य॒मित्यत्र॑। (=pítryam)
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What I meant was XrYZa, that is, a consonant string where 'r' is NOT the first one, but in between, maybe second.How would that be written?
Or is there a linguistic reason for 'r' to always be at the front of the consonant group, wherever it occurs?
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If one sees a consecutive sequence of consonants, and a final 'r' on top, is it always a rule/convention that that 'r' on top is to be considered at the front of the sequence only?For example, if one sees the following devanagari construct:पर्क्च्त = ??
(1) प् अ क् च् र् त ?(2) प् अ क् र् च् त ?(3) प् अ र् क् च् त ?Wherever a new ligature is formed of two/three consonants, it is much easier, since the ligature is treated as one letter. The question becomes more relevant when ligature doesn't exist, as in the above synthetic word.
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If one sees a consecutive sequence of consonants, and a final 'r' on top, is it always a rule/convention that that 'r' on top is to be considered at the front of the sequence only?
For example, if one sees the following devanagari construct:पर्क्च्त = ??
(1) प् अ क् च् र् त ?(2) प् अ क् र् च् त ?(3) प् अ र् क् च् त ?
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Dhanyavada.
Thanks,
Shashi
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Namaste VidvatjanAH,In devanagari mUrdhni is written as मूर्ध्नि where the r is considered after dh in the way it is written.If one were to write a word (which I can't think of any), where r is followed two consonants, e.g. mUdhrni, how would it be written?Or, when r is on top of the akShara, or saMyuktAkShara, we always pronounce the r before the saMyuktAkShara.Q1. How would mUdhrni be written in devanagari?Q2. Are there any such valid words where r is followed by two consonants?
Dhanyavada,
Shashi
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Greetings of the day,
The Anglo-Saxon script provides felicity of writing Sānskrit words as spoken, (the sequence of the speech sound follows without having to write them left to right or from the top to bottom.
मूर्ध्नि = Mūrdhni
दारिद्र्यम् = Dāridryam
कार्त्स्न्य = Kārtsnya
This is quite interesting; the Anglo-Saxon script which does not belong here, - but, it provides felicity at writing Sānskrit.
Thank you and Best regards,
========================
Namaste VidvatjanAH,In devanagari mUrdhni is written as मूर्ध्नि where the r is considered after dh in the way it is written.If one were to write a word (which I can't think of any), where r is followed two consonants, e.g. mUdhrni, how would it be written?Or, when r is on top of the akShara, or saMyuktAkShara, we always pronounce the r before the saMyuktAkShara.Q1. How would mUdhrni be written in devanagari?Q2. Are there any such valid words where r is followed by two consonants?
Dhanyavada,
Shashi--
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Namaste
1. Interesting that ‘Anglo-saxon’ script felicity is being invoked in to the deliberation here.
The felicity point is ‘ Writing Sanskrit as spoken’ ( ukta- lekhana) = True –Scripting of Voice.
2. Anglo-Saxon script was not designed as ‘ABUGIDA’ script. Anglo-Saxon has limited utility in serving the ‘True scripting’ needs of ‘Brahmi’ Devanagari.
Brahmi Devanagari design provides True scripting with three layers: (i) the base akshara (svara- Vyanjana) (ii) akshara-samyojana ( Gunita- Samyukta- abugida
feature) (iii) akshara- svara- ankana ( tonal –diacritic markers).
3. Some links placed below may help to explore more on this issue . The summary pointer is the ‘Compromises accommodated in Typography and Fonts aiming for providing a digital tool for True scripting of Brahmi Samskruth Phonemes’ .
True Phonetic/ Phonemic fonts needed for native needs of Samskrutham – Documents are yet to be seen on the horizon of Digital Font-arts, even at concept –level.
What seems to the trend is ‘ overlay of Brahmi on provided salad of IPA / Roman –Latin Character set.
Here below are some links on how ‘ Old English /anglo-saxon linguistics are explored in language teaching and Technology-standards.
Anglo-Saxon runes - Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anglo-Saxon_runes
Learning Old English: The Anglo-Saxons, and their alphabet | Liam's Language Journal (wordpress.com) - https://liamslanguagejournal.wordpress.com/2015/12/08/learning-old-english-the-anglo-saxons-and-their-alphabet/
Phonetic fonts - Bruce Hayes (ucla.edu) - https://linguistics.ucla.edu/people/hayes/Fonts/ ;
IPA Fonts | International Phonetic Association ; https://www.internationalphoneticassociation.org/content/ipa-fonts
Regards
BVK Sastry
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Namaste
A connected question: What is the right way to display the ‘deergha-svara symbol’ in each language? How to decode ?
This leads to a deliberation: ‘How are we able to read the same sounds from different brahmi scripting conventions ?
How to teach this in Digital Literacy to read visual text ? Adding accent in an indiscriminate way, would complicate the story !
See image below, generated from a standard word processor
Regards
BVK Sastry
From: bvpar...@googlegroups.com [mailto:bvpar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Shashi Joshi
Sent: 03 July 2021 09:05
To: bvpar...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: {भारतीयविद्वत्परिषत्} Devanagari question about r followed by two consonants
Misraji,
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Namaste
A connected question: What is the right way to display the ‘deergha-svara symbol’ in each language? How to decode ?
This leads to a deliberation: ‘How are we able to read the same sounds from different brahmi scripting conventions ?
How to teach this in Digital Literacy to read visual text ? Adding accent in an indiscriminate way, would complicate the story !
See image below, generated from a standard word processor
Regards
BVK Sastry
From: bvpar...@googlegroups.com [mailto:bvpar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Shashi Joshi
Sent: 03 July 2021 09:05
To: bvpar...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: {भारतीयविद्वत्परिषत्} Devanagari question about r followed by two consonants
Misraji,
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/bvparishat/CANu%2BFoA2iiix8xbvqTbXpf%3DvaXjFcRYUc9xeFw_n2raR9jqhOQ%40mail.gmail.com.
It is purely about how to read the script, or write if 'r' is followed by two consonants.How does a beginner of devanagari know how to read - मूर्ध्निIs it mUrdhni or mUdhrni (assuming the person has never heard the word) ?
This is not a trick question at all :) a sincere question.And also, if there are any real meaningful words that have 'r' followed by two consonants.
~ ShashiThanks,On Sat, Jul 3, 2021 at 7:33 AM Nagaraj Paturi <nagara...@gmail.com> wrote:Is this about कर्ता वृत्र चित्र kind of situations or only about clusters samyuktaaksharas with three consonants ?
On Sat, Jul 3, 2021 at 6:51 AM Shashi Joshi <shas...@gmail.com> wrote:
Namaste VidvatjanAH,In devanagari mUrdhni is written as मूर्ध्नि where the r is considered after dh in the way it is written.If one were to write a word (which I can't think of any), where r is followed two consonants, e.g. mUdhrni, how would it be written?Or, when r is on top of the akShara, or saMyuktAkShara, we always pronounce the r before the saMyuktAkShara.Q1. How would mUdhrni be written in devanagari?Q2. Are there any such valid words where r is followed by two consonants?
Dhanyavada,
Shashi
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--Nagaraj PaturiHyderabad, Telangana, INDIA.Director, Indic AcademyBoS, MIT School of Vedic Sciences, Pune, MaharashtraBoS Kavikulaguru Kalidasa Sanskrit University, Ramtek, MaharashtraBoS Veda Vijnana Gurukula, Bengaluru.Member, Advisory Council, Veda Vijnana Shodha Samsthanam, BengaluruBoS Rashtram School of Public LeadershipEditor-in-Chief, International Journal of Studies in Public LeadershipFormer Senior Professor of Cultural Studies,FLAME School of Communication and FLAME School of Liberal Education,Hyderabad, Telangana, INDIA.
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I think this would be read as mUdhnri, not mUdhrni
~ ShashiThanks,
On Sat, Jul 3, 2021 at 8:09 AM K S Kannan <ks.kann...@gmail.com> wrote:मूध्र्नि
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