The present grammar, which is chiefly intended for beginners, is believed to contain all the information that a student of Sanskrit is likely to want during the first two or three years of his reading. All allusions to cognate forms in Greek, Latin, or Gothic, have likewise been suppressed, because, however interesting and useful to the advanced student, they are apt to deprive the beginner of that clear and firm grasp of the grammatical system peculiar to the language of ancient India, which alone can form a solid foundation for the study both of Sanskrit and of Comparative Philology. While preparing the book two principal objects have been kept, clearness and correctness.
CHAPTER I. - The Alphabet
CHAPTER II. - Rules of Sandhi
CHAPTER III. - Declension
CHAPTER IV. - Adjectives
CHAPTER V. - Numerals
CHAPTER VI. - Pronouns
CHAPTER VII. - Conjugation
CHAPTER VIII. - The Ten Classes
CHAPTER IX. - Augment, Reduplication, and Terminations
CHAPTER X. - General Tenses
CHAPTER XI. - Intermediate
CHAPTER XII. - Strengthening and Weakening
CHAPTER XIII. - Aorist
CHAPTER XIV. - Future, Conditional, Periphrastic Future, and Benedictive
CHAPTER XV. - Passive
CHAPTER XVI. - Participles, Gerunds, and Infinitive
CHAPTER XVII. - Verbal Adjectives
CHAPTER XVIII. - Causative Verbs
CHAPTER XIX. - Desiderative Verbs
CHAPTER XX. - Intensive Verbs
CHAPTER XXI. - Denominative Verbs
CHAPTER XXII. - Prepositions and Particles
CHAPTER XXIII. - Compound Words
APPENDIX
Index of Nouns
Index of Verbs
Addenda ET Corrigenda
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