International audienceThis paper focuses on the classifications of words which were elaborated in the different schools of ancient Sanskrit grammar (Vyākaraṇa). It describes first the Pāṇinian classification of words, the most elaborate, and then presents the word class system in post-Pāṇinian Sanskrit grammars, which are predominantly topically organized. The final aim of the study is to provide an overview of the word class system in the Sanskrit grammatical tradition, similar to the one given by Robins in 1966 for the European grammatical tradition
In Sanskrit semantics, authors distinguished between a signifier (vācaka) and a signi- fied (vācya),...
Before the era of Panini’s Grammar, aindra School of grammar was the most popular tradition to provi...
Indian grammarians knew of linguistic variation: in Pāṇini's Aṣṭhādyāyī we already find rules to des...
International audienceThis paper focuses on the classifications of words which were elaborated in th...
International audienceThis paper aims at briefly recalling the presuppositions the European and Indi...
French grammars of Sanskrit—and, more broadly, Western grammars of Sanskrit— bring two different lan...
Sanskrit is one of the most ancient attested Indo-European languages, and it has one of the oldest l...
Sanskrit speech sounds (varṇas) are enumerated and classified in traditional Sanskrit grammatical wo...
The thesis, entitled as above, is divided into ten chapters dealing with the order of words mainly i...
There are certain discrepancies between the forms and constructions prescribed by Pāṇinian grammaria...
One of the important features of Sanskrit language is the long tradition of lexicons. The early sour...
The question of the relation of the first available Tamil grammar Tolkappiyam to various Sanskrit gr...
International audienceIndian linguistic thought begins around the 8 th-6 th centuries BC with the co...
In the Sanskrit tradition, grammar (vyākarana ) is considered to be the principal Vedic ancillary (v...
The work was accepted in Joint SIGHUM Workshop on Computational Linguistics for Cultural Heritage, S...
In Sanskrit semantics, authors distinguished between a signifier (vācaka) and a signi- fied (vācya),...
Before the era of Panini’s Grammar, aindra School of grammar was the most popular tradition to provi...
Indian grammarians knew of linguistic variation: in Pāṇini's Aṣṭhādyāyī we already find rules to des...
International audienceThis paper focuses on the classifications of words which were elaborated in th...
International audienceThis paper aims at briefly recalling the presuppositions the European and Indi...
French grammars of Sanskrit—and, more broadly, Western grammars of Sanskrit— bring two different lan...
Sanskrit is one of the most ancient attested Indo-European languages, and it has one of the oldest l...
Sanskrit speech sounds (varṇas) are enumerated and classified in traditional Sanskrit grammatical wo...
The thesis, entitled as above, is divided into ten chapters dealing with the order of words mainly i...
There are certain discrepancies between the forms and constructions prescribed by Pāṇinian grammaria...
One of the important features of Sanskrit language is the long tradition of lexicons. The early sour...
The question of the relation of the first available Tamil grammar Tolkappiyam to various Sanskrit gr...
International audienceIndian linguistic thought begins around the 8 th-6 th centuries BC with the co...
In the Sanskrit tradition, grammar (vyākarana ) is considered to be the principal Vedic ancillary (v...
The work was accepted in Joint SIGHUM Workshop on Computational Linguistics for Cultural Heritage, S...
In Sanskrit semantics, authors distinguished between a signifier (vācaka) and a signi- fied (vācya),...
Before the era of Panini’s Grammar, aindra School of grammar was the most popular tradition to provi...
Indian grammarians knew of linguistic variation: in Pāṇini's Aṣṭhādyāyī we already find rules to des...