abstract : This article deals with the changing ideas about meaning bearing elements in language from Pânini through Patanjali to Bhartrhari. For Pânini the grammatical constituents of words verbal roots, nominal stems and suffixes are the primary bearers of mening ; from their meanings the meanings of larger linguistic units such as words are derived. For Patanjali, on the other hand, the primary meaning bearing units are the words; grammatical constituents only have a derived meaning. For Bhartrhari in his Vâkyapadïya, finally, the primary meaning bearer is the sentence, from which the meanings of words and grammatical constituents are derived. This remarkable development is in need of an explanation, which may be obtained by comparis...
International audienceIndian linguistic thought begins around the 8 th-6 th centuries BC with the co...
ABSTRACT: Since most of the metalanguage used for Sanskrit grammar was already established by the se...
International audienceThe oldest known Sanskrit grammar, the Aṣṭādhyāyī of Pāṇini, describedby Leona...
abstract : This article deals with the changing ideas about meaning bearing elements in language fro...
This article provides a few observations on some of the theories that the Sanskrit and the Tamil gra...
This article discusses a few marginal and two central lines of thought on grammar (from Patañjali, 2...
The aim of this paper is to describe and explain the way in which grammarians of ancient India (from...
In the article I argue that the post-Vedic grammatical scholarship that culminated in the compositio...
Indian grammarians knew of linguistic variation: in Pāṇini's Aṣṭhādyāyī we already find rules to des...
ABSTRACT : Panini uses the word bhâva when characterizing the meaning of such suffixes as tva and ta...
Émilie Aussant est chargée de recherche au laboratoire d’Histoire des théories linguistiques (UMR 75...
Middle Indian languages belong to the same linguistic family as Sanskrit. But their grammarians offe...
Bhartrhari's Vakyapadiya is a major work in Sanskrit Linguistics and its study is a long-felt need. ...
There are certain discrepancies between the forms and constructions prescribed by Pāṇinian grammaria...
This paper in an elementary level expresses the inevitable relation between the word and meaning fro...
International audienceIndian linguistic thought begins around the 8 th-6 th centuries BC with the co...
ABSTRACT: Since most of the metalanguage used for Sanskrit grammar was already established by the se...
International audienceThe oldest known Sanskrit grammar, the Aṣṭādhyāyī of Pāṇini, describedby Leona...
abstract : This article deals with the changing ideas about meaning bearing elements in language fro...
This article provides a few observations on some of the theories that the Sanskrit and the Tamil gra...
This article discusses a few marginal and two central lines of thought on grammar (from Patañjali, 2...
The aim of this paper is to describe and explain the way in which grammarians of ancient India (from...
In the article I argue that the post-Vedic grammatical scholarship that culminated in the compositio...
Indian grammarians knew of linguistic variation: in Pāṇini's Aṣṭhādyāyī we already find rules to des...
ABSTRACT : Panini uses the word bhâva when characterizing the meaning of such suffixes as tva and ta...
Émilie Aussant est chargée de recherche au laboratoire d’Histoire des théories linguistiques (UMR 75...
Middle Indian languages belong to the same linguistic family as Sanskrit. But their grammarians offe...
Bhartrhari's Vakyapadiya is a major work in Sanskrit Linguistics and its study is a long-felt need. ...
There are certain discrepancies between the forms and constructions prescribed by Pāṇinian grammaria...
This paper in an elementary level expresses the inevitable relation between the word and meaning fro...
International audienceIndian linguistic thought begins around the 8 th-6 th centuries BC with the co...
ABSTRACT: Since most of the metalanguage used for Sanskrit grammar was already established by the se...
International audienceThe oldest known Sanskrit grammar, the Aṣṭādhyāyī of Pāṇini, describedby Leona...