CHAPTER IX.
THE PRESENT-SYSTEM.
599. THE present-system, or system of forms coming from the present-stem, is composed (as was pointed out above) of a present indicative tense, together with a subjunctive (mostly lost in the classical language), an optative, an imperative, and a participle, and also a past tense, an augment-preterit, to which we give (by analogy with the Greek) the name of imperfect.
a. These forms often go in Sanskrit grammars by the name of “special tenses”, while the other tense-systems are styled “general tenses” — as if the former were made from a special tense-stem or modified root, while the latter came, all alike, from the root itself. There is no reason why such a distinction and nomenclature should be retained; since, on the one hand, the “special tenses” come in one set of verbs directly from the root, and, on the other hand, the other tense-systems are mostly made from stems — and, in the case of the aorist, from stems having a variety of form comparable with that of present-stems.
600. Practically, the present-system is the most prominent and important part of the whole conjugation, since, from the earliest period of the language, its forms are very much more frequent than those of all the other systems together.
a. Thus, in the Veda, the occurrences of personal forms of this system are to those of all others about as three to one; in the Aitareya Brāhmaṇa, as five to one; in the Hitopadeśa, as six to one; in the śakuntalā, as eight to one; in Manu, as thirty to one.
601. And, as there is also great variety in the manner in which different roots form their present-stem, this, as being their most conspicuous difference, is made the basis of their principal classification; and a verb is said to be of this or of that conjugation, or class, according to the way in which its present-stem is made and inflected.
602. In a small minority of verbs, the present-stem is identical with the root. Then there are besides (excluding the passive and causative) seven more or less different methods of forming a present-stem from the root, each method being followed by a larger or smaller number of verbs. These are the “classes” or “conjugation-classes”, as laid down by the native Hindu grammarians. They are arranged by the latter in a certain wholly artificial and unsystematic order (the ground of which has never been discovered); and they are wont to be designated in European works according to this order, or else, after Hindu example, by the root standing at the head of each class in the Hindu lists. A different arrangement and nomenclature will be followed here, namely as below — the classes being divided (as is usual in European grammars) into two more general classes or conjugations, distinguished from one another by wider differences than those which separate the special classes.
603. The classes of the FIRST or NON-a
-CONJUGATION are as follows:
I. The root-class (second class, or ad
-class, of the Hindu
grammarians); its present-stem is coincident with the root itself: thus,
अद् ad
eat; इ i
go; आस् ās
sit; या yā
go; द्विष् dviṣ
hate; दुह् duh
milk.
II. The reduplicating class (third or hu
-class); the root is
reduplicated to form the present-stem: thus, जुहु juhu
from √हु hu
sacrifice; ददा dadā
from √दा dā
give; बिभृ bibhṛ
from √भृ
bhṛ
bear.
III. The nasal class (seventh or rudh
-class); a nasal, extended to
the syllable न na
in strong forms, is inserted before the final
consonant of the root: thus, रुन्ध् rundh
(or रुणध् ruṇadh
) from
√रुध् rudh
obstruct; युञ्ज् yuñj
(or युनज् yunaj
) from √युज्
yuj
join.
IV. a. The nu
-class (fifth or su
-class); the syllable नु nu
is
added to the root: thus, सुनु sunu
from √सु su
press out; आप्नु
āpnu
from √आप् āp obtain.
b. A very small number (only half-a-dozen) of roots ending already in
न् n
, and also one very common and quite irregularly inflected root
not so ending (कृ kṛ
make), add उ u
alone to form the
present-stem. This is the eighth or tan
-class of the Hindu
grammarians; it may be best ranked by us as a sub-class, the u
-class:
thus, तनु tanu
from √तन् tan
stretch.
V. The nā
-class (ninth or krī
-class); the syllable ना nā
(or, in
weak forms, नी nī
) is added to the root: thus, क्रीणा krīṇā
(or
क्रीणी krīṇī
) from √क्री krī
buy; स्तभ्ना stabhnā
(or स्तभ्नी
stabhnī
) from √स्तभ् stabh
establish.
604. These classes have in common, as their most fundamental characteristic, a shift of accent: the tone being now upon the ending, and now upon the root or the class-sign. Along with this goes a variatior in the stem itself, which has a stronger or fuller form when the accent rests upon it, and a weaker or briefer form when the accent is on the ending these: forms are to be distinguished as the strong stem and the weak stem respectively (in part, both have been given above). The classes also form their optative active, their 2d sing. imperative, their 3d pl. middle, and their middle participle, in a different manner from the others.
605. In the classes of the SECOND or a
-CONJUGATION, the present-stem
ends in a
, and the accent has a fixed place, remaining always upon the
same syllable of the stem, and never shifted to the endings. Also, the
optative, the 2d sing. impv., the 3d pl. middle, and the middle
participle, are (as just stated) unlike those of the other conjugation.
606. The classes of this conjugation are as follows:
VI. The a
-class, or unaccented a
-class (first or bhū
-class); the
added class-sign is a
simply; and the root, which has the accent, is
(if capable of it) strengthened by guṇa
throughout: thus, भव bháva
from √भू bhū
be; नय náya
from √नी nī
lead; बोध bódha
from
√बुध् budh
wake; वद váda
from √वद् vad
speak.
VII. The á
-class, or accented a
-class (sixth or tud
-class); the
added class-sign is a
, as in the preceding class; but it has the
accent, and the unaccented root remains unstrengthened: thus, तुद tudá
from √तुद् tud
thrust; सृज sṛjá
from √सृज् sṛj
let loose; सुव
suvá
from √सू sū
give birth.
VIII. The ya
-class (fourth or div
-class); ya
is added to the
root, which has the accent: thus, दीव्य dī́vya
from √दिव् div
(more
properly दीव् dīv
: see 765) play; नह्य náhya
from √नह् nah
bind; क्रुध्य krúdhya
from √क्रुध् krudh be angry.
IX. The passive conjugation is also properly a present-system only,
having a class-sign which is not extended into the other systems; though
it differs markedly from the remaining classes in having a specific
meaning, and in being formable in the middle voice from all transitive
verbs. Its inflection may therefore best be treated next to that of the
ya
-class, with which it is most nearly connected, differing from it as
the á
-class from the a
-class. It forms its stem, namely, by adding
an accented yá
to the root: thus, अद्य adyá
from √अद् ad
eat;
रुध्य rudhyá
from √रुध् rudh
obstruct; बुध्य budhyá
from √बुध्
budh
wake; तुद्य tudyá
from √तुद् tud
thrust.
607. The Hindu grammarians reckon a tenth class or cur
-class, having
a class-sign áya
added to a strengthened root (thus, coráya
from
√cur
), and an inflection like that of the other a
-stems. Since,
however, this stem is not limited to the present-system, but extends
also into the rest of the conjugation — while it also has to a great
extent a causative value, and may be formed in that value from a large
number of roots — it will be best treated in full along with the
derivative conjugations (chap. XIV., 1041 ff.).
608. A small number of roots add in the present-system a ch
, or
substitute a ch
for their final consonant, and form a stem ending in
cha
or chá
, which is then inflected like any a
-stem. This is
historically, doubtless, a true class-sign, analogous with the rest; but
the verbs showing it are so few, and in formation so irregular, that
they are not well to be put together into a class, but may best be
treated as special cases falling under the other classes.
a. Roots adding ch
are ṛ
and yu
, which make the stems ṛcchá
and
yúccha
.
b. Roots substituting ch
for their final are iṣ
, uṣ
(or vas
shine), gam
, yam
, which make the stems icchá
, ucchá
, gáccha
,
yáccha
.
c. Of the so-called roots ending in ch
, several are more or less
clearly stems, whose use has been extended from the present to other
systems of tenses.
609. Roots are not wholly limited, even in the later language, to one mode of formation of their present-stem, but are sometimes reckoned as belonging to two or more different conjugation-classes. And such variety of formation is especially frequent in the Veda, being exhibited by a considerable proportion of the roots there occurring; already in the Brāhmaṇas, however, a condition is reached nearly agreeing in this respect with the classical language. The different present-formations sometimes have differences of meaning; yet not more important ones than are often found belonging to the same formation, nor of a kind to show clearly a difference of value as originally belonging to the separate classes of presents. If anything of this kind is to be established, it must be from the derivative conjugations, which are separated by no fixed line from the present-systems.
610. We take up now the different classes, in the order in which they have been arranged above, to describe more in detail, and with illustration, the formation of their present-systems, and to notice the irregularities belonging under each class.
I. Root-class (second, ad
-class).
611. In this class there is no class-sign; the root itself is also present-stem, and to it are added directly the personal endings — but combined in subjunctive and optative with the respective mode-signs; and in the imperfect the augment is prefixed to the root.
a. The accented endings (552) regularly take the accent — except in the
imperfect, where it falls on the augment — and before them the root
remains unchanged; before the unaccented endings, the root takes the
guṇa
-strengthening.
b. It is only in the first three classes that the endings come immediately in contact with a final consonant of the root, and that the roles for consonant combination have to be noted and applied. In these classes, then, additional paradigms will be given, to illustrate the modes of combination.
1. Present Indicative.
612. The endings are the primary (with अते áte
in 3d pl. mid.), added
to the bare root. The root takes the accent, and has guṇa
, if capable
of it, in the three persons sing. act.
Examples of inflection: a. active, root इ i
go: strong form of
root-stem, ए é
; weak form, इ i
; middle, root ās
sit, stem ā́s
(irregularly accented throughout: 628).
active.
middle.
s.
d.
p.
s.
d.
p.
1
एमि
émi
इवस्
ivás
इमस्
imás
आसे
ā́se
आस्वहे
ā́svahe
आस्महे
ā́smahe
2
एषि
éṣi
इथस्
ithás
इथ
ithá
आस्से
ā́sse
आसाथे
ā́sāthe
आद्ध्वे
ā́ddhve
3
एति
éti
इतस्
itás
यन्ति
yánti
आस्ते
ā́ste
आसाते
ā́sāte
आसते
ā́sate
b. root dviṣ
. hate: strong stem-form, dvéṣ
; weak, dviṣ
. For
rules of combination for the final ṣ
, see 226.
1
dvéṣmi
dviṣvás
dviṣmás
dviṣé
dviṣváhe
dviṣmáhe
2
dvékṣi
dviṣṭhás
dviṣṭhá
dvikṣé
dviṣā́the
dviḍḍhvé
3
dvéṣṭi
dviṣṭás
dviṣánti
dviṣṭé
dviṣā́te
dviṣáte
c. root duh
milk: strong stem-form, dóh
; weak, duh
. For rules
of combination for the final h
, and for the conversion of the initial
to dh
, see 222 a, 155, 160.
1
dóhmi
duhvás
duhmás
duhé
duhváhe
duhmáhe
2
dhókṣi
dugdhás
dugdhá
dhukṣé
duhā́the
dhugdhvé
3
dógdhi
dugdhás
duhánti
dugdhé
duhā́te
duháte
d. root lih
lick: strong stem, léh
; weak, lih
. For rules of
combination of the final h
, see 222 b.
1
léhmi
lihvás
lihmás
lihé
lihváhe
lihmáhe
2
lékṣi
līḍhás
līḍhá
likṣé
lihā́the
līḍhvé
3
léḍhi
līḍhás
lihánti
līḍhé
lihā́te
liháte
613. Examples of the 3d sing. mid. coincident in form with the 1st
sing. are not rare in the older language (both V. and B.): the most
frequent examples are ī́śe, duhé, vidé, śáye
; more sporadic are
cité, bruve, huvé
. To tha
of the 2d pl. is added na
in
sthána, pāthánā, yāthána.
The irregular accent of the 3d pl. mid. is
found in RV. in rihaté, duhaté
. Examples of the same person in re
and rate
also occur: thus (besides those mentioned below, 629–30,
635), vidré
, and, with auxiliary vowel, arhire
(unless these are to
be ranked, rather, as perfect forms without reduplication: 790 b).
2. Present Subjunctive.
614. Subjunctive forms of this class are not uncommon in the older
language, and nearly all those which the formation anywhere admits are
quotable, from Veda or from Brāhmaṇa. A complete paradigm, accordingly,
is given below, with the few forms not actually quotable for this class
enclosed in brackets. We may take as models (as above), for the active
the root i
go, and for the middle the root ās
sit, from both of
which numerous forms are met with (although neither for these nor for
any others can the whole series be found in actual use).
a. The mode-stems are áya (é+a)
and ā́sa (ā́s+a)
respectively.
active.
middle.
s.
d.
p.
s.
d.
p.
1
áyāni
áyā
áyāva
áyāma
ā́sāi
ā́sāvahāi
[ā́sāvahe
]
ā́sāmahāi
[ā́sāmahe
]
2
áyasi
áyas
áyathas
áyatha
ā́sase
ā́sāsāi
[ā́sāithe
]
[ā́sadhve
]
ā́sādhvāi
3
áyati
áyat
áyatas
áyan
ā́sate
ā́sātāi
ā́sāite
[ā́sante
] -nta
ā́sāntāi
615. The RV. has no middle forms in āi
except those of the first
person. The 1st. sing. act. in ā
occurs only in RV., in
ayā, bravā, stávā
. The 2d and 3d sing. act. with primary endings are
very unusual in the Brāhmaṇas. Forms irregularly made with long ā
,
like those from present-stems in a
, are not rare in AV. and B.: thus,
ayās, ayāt, áyān; ásāt, brávāt; bravāthas; asātha, ayātha, bravātha, hanātha; ádān, dohān
.
Of middle forms with secondary endings are found hánanta
, 3d pl., and
īśata
, 3d sing. (after mā́
prohibitive), which is an isolated
example. The only dual person in āite
is brávāite
.
3. Present Optative.
616. The personal endings combined with the mode-signs of this mode (या
yā
in act., ई ī
in mid.) have been given in full above (566). The
stem-form is the unaccented and unstrengthened root.
active.
middle.
s.
d.
p.
s.
d.
p.
1
इयाम्
iyā́m
इयाव
iyā́va
इयाम
iyā́ma
आसीय
ā́sīya
आसीवहि
ā́sīvahi
आसीमहि
ā́sīmahi
2
इयास्
iyā́s
इयातम्
iyā́tam
इयात
iyā́ta
आसीथास्
ā́sīthās
आसीयाथाम्
ā́sīyāthām
आसीध्वम्
ā́sīdhvam
3
इयात्
iyā́t
इयाताम्
iyā́tām
इयुस्
iyús
आसीत
ā́sīta
आसीयाताम्
ā́sīyātām
आसीरन्
ā́sīran
a. In the same manner, from √dviṣ, dviṣyā́m
and dviṣīyá
; from
√duh, duhyā́m
and duhīyá
; from √lih, lihyā́m
and lihīyá
. The
inflection is so regular that the example above given is enough, with
the addition of dviṣīyá
, to show the normal accentuation in the
middle: thus, sing. dviṣīyá, dviṣīthā́s, dviṣītá
; du.
dviṣīváhi, dviṣīyā́thām, dviṣīyā́tām
; pl.
dviṣīmáhi, dviṣīdhvám, dviṣīrán
.
b. The RV. has once tana
in 2d pl. act. (in syātana
).
4. Present Imperative.
617. The imperative adds, in second and third persons, its own endings
(with अताम् atām
in 3d pl. mid.) directly to the root-stem. The stem
is accented and strengthened in 3d sing. act.; elsewhere, the accent is
on the ending and the root remains unchanged. The first persons, so
called, of the later language are from the old subjunctive, and have its
strengthened stem and accent; they are repeated here from where they
were given above (614 a). In the 2d sing. act., the ending is regularly
(as in the two following classes) धि dhi
if the root end with a
consonant, and हि hi
if it end with a vowel. As examples we take the
roots already used for the purpose.
a. Thus, from the roots इ i
and आस् ās
:
active.
middle.
s.
d.
p.
s.
d.
p.
1
अयानि
áyāni
अयाव
áyāva
अयाम
áyāma
आसै
ā́sāi
आसावहै
ā́sāvahāi
आसामहै
ā́sāmahāi
2
इहि
ihí
इतम्
itám
इत
itá
आस्स्व
ā́ssva
आसाथाम्
ā́sāthām
आद्ध्वम्
ā́ddhvam
3
एतु
étu
इताम्
itā́m
यन्तु
yántu
आस्ताम्
ā́stām
आसाताम्
ā́sātām
आसताम्
ā́satām
b. From the roots dviṣ
and duh
and lih
:
1
dvéṣāṇi
dvéṣāva
dvéṣāma
dvéṣāi
dvéṣāvahāi
dvéṣāmahāi
2
dviḍḍhí
dviṣṭám
dviṣṭá
dvikṣvá
dviṣā́thām
dviḍḍhvám
3
dvéṣṭu
dviṣṭā́m
dviṣántu
dviṣṭā́m
dviṣā́tām
dviṣátām
1
dóhāni
dóhāva
dóhāma
dóhāi
dóhāvahāi
dóhāmahāi
2
dugdhí
dugdhám
dugdhá
dhukṣvá
duhā́thām
dhugdhvám
3
dógdhu
dugdhā́m
duhántu
dugdhā́m
duhā́tām
duhátām
1
léhāni
léhāva
léhāma
léhāi
léhāvahāi
léhāmahāi
2
līḍhí
līḍhám
līḍhá
likṣvá
lihā́thām
līḍhvám
3
léḍhu
līḍhā́m
lihántu
līḍhā́m
lihā́tām
lihátām
- The 2d sing. act. ending
tāt
is found in the older language in a few verbs of this class: namely,vittā́t, vītāt, brūtā́t, hatāt, yātāt, stutāt
. In 3d sing. mid., two or three verbs have in the older language the endingām
: thus,duhā́m
(only RV. case),vidām, śayām
; and in 3d pl. mid. AV. hasduhrā́m
andduhratām
. The use oftana
forta
in 2d pl. act. is quite frequent in the Veda: thus,itana, yātána, attana
, etc. And instota, éta étana, bravītana, śāstána, hantana
, we have examples in the same person of a strong (and accented) stem.
5. Present Participle.
619. a. The active participle has the ending अन्त् ánt
(weak
stem-form अत् at
) added to the unstrengthened root. Mechanically, it
may be formed from the 3d pl. by dropping the final इ i
. Thus, for the
verbs inflected above, the active participles are यन्त् yánt
, दुहन्त्
duhánt
, द्विषन्त् dviṣánt
, लिहन्त् lihánt
. The feminine stem ends
usually in अती atī́
: thus, यती yatī́
, दुहती duhatī́
, द्विषती
dviṣatī́
, लिहती lihatī́
: but, from roots in ā
, in आन्ती ā́ntī
or
आती ātī́
(449 g).
b. The middle participle has the ending आन āná
, added to the
unstrengthened root: thus, इयान iyāná
, दुहान duhāná
, द्विषाण
dviṣāṇá
, लिहान lihāná
.
c. The root ās
forms the anomalous and isolated ā́sīna
(in RV. also
āsāná
).
d. But a number of these participles in the older language have a
double accent, either on the ending or on the radical syllable: thus,
īśāná
and ī́śāna, ohāná
and óhāna, duhāná
and dúhāna
(also
dúghāna
), rihāṇá
and ríhāṇa, vidāná
and vídāna, suvāná
and
súvāna, stuvāná
and stavāná
and stávāna
— the last having in part
also a strong form of the root.
6. Imperfect.
620. This tense adds the secondary endings to the root as increased by
prefixion of the augment. The root has the guṇa
-strengthening (if
capable of it) in the three persons of the singular active, although the
accent is always upon the augment. Examples of inflection are:
a. From the roots इ i
and आस् ās
:
active.
middle.
s.
d.
p.
s.
d.
p.
1
आयम्
ā́yam
ऐव
āíva
ऐम
āíma
आसि
ā́si
आस्वहि
ā́svahi
आस्महि
ā́smahi
2
ऐस्
āís
ऐतम्
āítam
ऐत
āíta
आस्थास्
ā́sthās
आसाथाम्
ā́sāthām
आद्ध्वम्
ā́ddhvam
3
ऐत्
āít
ऐताम्
āítām
आयन्
ā́yan
आस्त
ā́sta
आसाताम्
ā́sātām
आसत
ā́sata
b. From the roots dviṣ
and duh
and lih
:
1
ádveṣam
ádviṣva
ádviṣma
ádviṣi
ádviṣvahi
ádviṣmahi
2
ádveṭ
ádviṣṭam
ádviṣṭa
ádviṣṭhās
ádviṣāthām
ádviḍḍhvam
3
ádveṭ
ádviṣṭām
ádviṣan
ádviṣṭa
ádviṣātām
ádviṣata
1
ádoham
áduhva
áduhma
áduhi
áduhvahi
áduhmahi
2
ádhok
ádugdham
ádugdha
ádugdhās
áduhāthām
ádhugdhvam
3
ádhok
ádugdhām
áduhan
ádugdha
áduhātām
áduhata
1
áleham
álihva
álihma
álihi
álihvahi
álihmahi
2
áleṭ
álīḍham
álīḍha
álīḍhās
álihāthām
álīḍhvam
3
áleṭ
álīḍhām
álihan
álīḍha
álihātām
álihata
621. a. Roots ending in ā
may in the later language optionally take
us
instead of an
in 3d pl. act. (the ā
being lost before it); and
in the older they always do so: thus, áyus
from √yā
, ápus
from
√pā
protect, abhus
from √bhā
. The same ending is also allowed
and met with in the case of a few roots ending in consonants: namely
vid
know, cakṣ
, dviṣ
, duh
, mṛj
. RV. has atviṣus
.
b. The ending tana
, 2d pl. act., is found in the Veda in
áyātana, ásastana, āítana, ábravītana
. A strong stem is seen in the
1st pl. homa
, and the 2d pl. abravīta
and ábravītana
.
c. To save the characteristic endings in 2d and 3d sing. act., the root
ad
inserts a
: thus, ā́das, ā́dat
; the root as
inserts ī
: thus,
ā́sīs
, ā́sīt
(see below, 636); compare also 631–4.
622. The use of the persons of this tense, without augment, in the
older language, has been noticed above (587). Augmentless imperfects of
this class are rather uncommon in the Veda: thus, hán, vés
, 2d sing.;
han, vet, stāut, dán
(?), 3d sing.; bruvan, duhús, cakṣus
, 3d pl.;
vasta, sūta
, 3d sing. mid.
623. The first or root-form of aorist is identical in its formation with this imperfect: see below, 829 ff.
624. In the Veda (but hardly outside of the RV.) are found certain 2d
sing. forms, having an imperative value, made by adding the ending si
to the (accented and strengthened) root. In part, they are the only
root-forms belonging to the roots from which they come: thus, jóṣi
(for jóṣṣi
, from √juṣ
), dhákṣi, párṣi
(√pṛ
pass),
prā́si, bhakṣi, ratsi, sátsi, hoṣi
; but the majority of them have forms
(one or more) of a root-present, or sometimes of a root-aorist, beside
them: thus, kṣéṣi
(√kṣi
rule), jéṣi, dárṣi, nakṣi
(√naś
.
attain), néṣi, mátsi, māsi
(√mā
measure),
yákṣi, yáṁsi, yāsi, yótsi, rā́si, vákṣi
(√vah
), véṣi, śróṣi, sakṣi
.
Their formal character is somewhat disputed; but they are probably
indicative persons of the root-class, used imperatively.
625. Forms of this class are made from nearly 150 roots, either in the earlier language, or in the later, or in both: namely, from about 50 through the whole life of the language, from 80 in the older period (of Veda, Brāhmaṇa, and Sūtra) alone, and from a few (about 15) in the later period (epic and classical) only^([1]). Not a few of these roots, however, show only sporadic root-forms, beside a more usual conjugation of some other class; nor is it in all cases possible to separate clearly root-present from root-aorist forms.
a. Many roots of this class, as of the other classes of the first
conjugation, show transfers to the second or a
-conjugation, forming a
conjugation-stem by adding a to their strong or weak stem, or even to
both: thus, from √mṛj
, both mārja
(627) and mṛja
. Such transfers
are met with even in the oldest language; but they usually become more
frequent later, often establishing a new mode of present inflection by
the side of, or in substitution for, the earlier mode.
b. A number of roots offer irregularities of inflection; these are, in the main, pointed out in the following paragraphs.
Irregularities of the Root-class.
626. The roots of the class ending in u
have in their strong forms
the vṛddhi
instead of the guṇa
-strengthening before an ending
beginning with a consonant: thus, from √stu
, stāúmi
, ástāut
, and
the like: but ástavam
, stávāni
, etc.
a. Roots found to exhibit this peculiarity in actual use are kṣṇu
,
yu
unite, su
(or sū
) impel, sku, stu, snu
(these in the
earlier language), nu, ru
, and hnu
. RV. has once stoṣi
, and
anāvan
. Compare also 633.
627. The root mṛj
also has the vṛddhi
-vowel in its strong forms:
thus, mā́rjmi
, ámārjam
, ámārṭ
(150 b); and the same strengthening
is said to be allowed in weak forms before endings beginning with a
vowel: thus, mārjantu
, amārjan
; but the only quotable case is
mārjīta
(LśS.). Forms from a
-stems begin to appear already in AV.
a In the other tense-systems, also, and in derivation, mṛj
shows often
the vṛddhi
instead of the guṇa
-strengthening.
628. A number of roots accent the radical syllable throughout, both in
strong and in weak forms: thus, all those beginning with a long vowel,
ās, īḍ, īr, īś
; and also cakṣ, takṣ, trā, nīṅs, vas
clothe,
śiñj, śī
lie, and sū
. All these, except takṣ
and trā
(and
trā
also in the Vedic forms), are ordinarily conjugated in middle
voice only. Forms with the same irregular accent occur now and then in
the Veda from other verbs: thus, mátsva
, yákṣva
, sákṣva
, sā́kṣva
,
ṛ́dhat
. Middle participles so accented have been noticed above (619 d).
629. Of the roots mentioned in the last paragraph, śī
lie has the
guṇa
-strengthening throughout: thus, śáye, śéṣe, śáyīya, śáyāna
, and
so on. Other irregularities in its inflection (in part already noticed)
are the 3d pl. persons śérate
(AV. etc. have also śére
), śératām
,
áśerata
(RV. has also áśeran
), the 3d sing. pres. śáye
(R.) and
impv. śáyām
. The isolated active form áśayat
is common in the older
language; other a
-forms, active and middle, occur later.
630. Of the same roots, īḍ
and īś
insert a union-vowel i
before
certain endings: thus, ī́śiṣe
, ī́śidhve
, ī́ḍiṣva
(these three being
the only forms noted in the older language); but RV. has ī́kṣe
beside
ī́śiṣe
; the śvU. has once īśite
for īṣṭe
. The 3d pl. ī́śire
(on
account of its accent) is also apparently present rather than perfect.
The MS. has once the 3d sing. impf. āiśa
(like aduha
: 635).
631. The roots rud
weep, svap
sleep, an
breathe, and śvas
blow insert a union-vowel i
before all the endings beginning with a
consonant, except the s
and t
of 2d and 3d sing. impf., where they
insert instead either a
or ī
: thus, svápimi, śvásiṣi, ániti
, and
ā́nat
or ā́nīt
. And in the other forms, the last three are allowed to
accent either root or ending: thus, svápantu
and śvásantu
(AV.), or
svapántu
etc. The AV. has sváptu
instead of svápitu
.
a. In the older language, √vam
makes the same insertions: thus,
vamiti, avamīt
; and other cases occasionally occur: thus,
jániṣva, vasiṣva
(√vas
clothe), śnathihi, stanihi
(all RV.),
yamiti
(JB.), śocimi
(MBh.). On the other hand, √an
early makes
forms from an a
-stem: thus, ánati
(AV.); pple ánant
(śB.); opt.
anet
(AB.).
632. The root brū
speak, say (of very frequent use) takes the
union-vowel ī
after the root when strengthened, before the initial
consonant of an ending: thus,
brávīmi, brávīṣi, brávīti, ábravīs, ábravīt
; but
brūmás, brūyā́m, ábravam, ábruvan
, etc. Special occasional
irregularities are brūmi, bravīhi, abruvam, abrūvan, bruyāt
, and
sporadic forms from an a
-stem. The subj. dual brávāite
has been
noticed above (616); also the strong forms abravīta, ábravītana
(621
a).
633. Some of the roots in u
are allowed to be inflected like brū
:
namely, ku, tu, ru,
and stu
; and an occasional instance is met with
of a form so made (in the older language, only tavīti
noted; in the
later, only stavīmi
, once).
634. The root am
(hardly found in the later language) takes ī
as
union-vowel: thus, amīṣi
(RV.), amīti
and āmīt
and amīṣva
(TS).
From √śam
occur śamīṣva
(VS.; TS. śamiṣva
) and śamīdhvam
(TB.
etc.).
635. The irregularities of √duh
in the older language have been
already in part noted: the 3d pl. indic. mid. duhaté, duhré
, and
duhráte
; 3d sing. impv. duhā́m
, pl. duhrā́m
and duhratām
; impf.
act. 3d sing. áduhat
(which is found also in the later language), 3d
pl. aduhran
(beside áduhan
and duhús
); the mid. pple dúghāna
;
and (quite unexampled elsewhere) the opt. forms duhīyát
and duhīyán
(RV. only). The MS. has aduha
3d sing. and aduhra
3d pl. impf. mid.,
apparently formed to correspond to the pres. duhe
(613) and duhre
as
adugdha
and aduhata
correspond to dugdhe
and duhate
: compare
āiśa
(630), related in like manner to the 3d sing. īśe
.
Some of the roots of this class are abbreviated or otherwise weakened in their weak forms: thus: —
636. The root अस् as
be loses its vowel in weak forms (except where
protected by combination with the augment). Its 2d sing. indic. is असि
ási
(instead of assi
); its 2d sing. impv. is एधि edhí
(irregularly
from asdhi
). The insertion of ई ī
in 2d and 3d sing. impf. has been
noticed already above.
a. The forms of this extremely common verb are, then, as follows:
Indicative.
Optative.
s.
d.
p.
s.
d.
p.
1
अस्मि
ásmi
स्वस्
svás
स्मस्
smás
स्याम्
syā́m
स्याव
syā́va
स्याम
syā́ma
2
असि
ási
स्थस्
sthás
स्थ
sthá
स्यास्
syā́s
स्यातम्
syā́tam
स्यात
syā́ta
3
अस्ति
ásti
स्तस्
stás
सन्ति
sánti
स्यात्
syā́t
स्याताम्
syā́tām
स्युस्
syús
Imperative.
Imperfect.
1
असानि
ásāni
असाव
ásāva
असाम
ásāma
आसम्
ā́sam
आस्व
ā́sva
आस्म
ā́sma
2
एधि
edhí
स्तम्
stám
स्त
stá
आसीस्
ā́sīs
आस्तम्
ā́stam
आस्त
ā́sta
3
अस्तु
ástu
स्ताम्
stā́m
सन्तु
sántu
आसीत्
ā́sīt
आस्ताम्
ā́stām
आसन्
ā́san
Participle सन्त् sánt
(fem. सती satī́
).
b. Besides the forms of the present-system, there is made from this
root only a perfect, ā́sa
etc. (800), of wholly regular inflection.
c. The Vedic subjunctive forms are the usual ones, made upon the stem
ása
. They are in frequent use, and appear (asat
especially) even in
late texts where the subjunctive is almost lost. The resolution siā́m
etc. (opt.) is common in Vedic verse. As 2d and 3d sing. impf. is a few
times met with the more normal ās
(for ās-s, ās-t
). Sthána
, 2d
pl., was noted above (613).
d. Middle forms from √as
are also given by the grammarians as allowed
with certain prepositions (vi+ati
), but they are not quotable; smahe
and syāmahe
(!) occur in the epics, but are merely instances of the
ordinary epic confusion of voices (529 a). Confusions of primary and
secondary endings — namely, sva
and sma
(not rare), and, on the
other hand, syāvas
and syāmas
— are also epic. A middle present
indicative is said to be compounded (in 1st and 2d persons) with the
nomen agentis in tṛ
(tar
) to form a periphrastic future in the
middle voice (but see below, 947). The 1st sing. indic. is he
; the
rest is in the usual relation of middle to active forms (in 2d pers.,
se, dhve, sva, dhvam
, with total loss of the root itself).
637. The root han
smite, slay is treated somewhat after the manner
of noun-stems in an
in declension (421): in weak forms, it loses its
n
before an initial consonant (except m
and v
) of a personal
ending (not in the optative), and its a
before an initial vowel — and
in the latter case its h
, in contact with the n
, is changed to gh
(compare 402). Thus, for example:
Present Indicative.
Imperfect.
s.
d.
p.
s.
d.
p.
1
hánmi
hanvás
hanmás
áhanam
áhanva
áhanma
2
háṅsi
hathás
hathá
áhan
áhatam
áhata
3
hánti
hatás
ghnánti
áhan
áhatām
ághnan
a. Its participle is ghnánt
(fem. ghnatī́
). Its 2d sing. impv. is
jahí
(by anomalous dissimilation, on the model of reduplicating
forms).
b. Middle forms from this root are frequent in the Brāhmaṇas, and those
that occur are formed in general according to the same rules: thus,
hate, hanmahe, ghnate; ahata, aghnātām, aghnata
(in AB., also
ahata
); ghnīta
(but also hanīta
). Forms from transfer-stems,
hana
and ghna
, are met with from an early period.
638. The root vaś
be eager is in the weak forms regularly and
usually contracted to uś
(as in the perfect: 794 b): thus, uśmási
(V.: once apparently abbreviated in RV. to śmasi
), uśánti
; pple
uśánt, uśāná
. Middle forms (except the pple) do not occur; nor do the
weak forms of the imperfect, which are given as āuśva, āuṣṭam
, etc.
a. RV. has in like, manner the participle uṣāṇá
from the root vas
clothe.
639. The root śās
order shows some of the peculiarities of a
reduplicated verb, lacking (646) the n
before t
in all 3d persons
pl. and in the active participle. A part of its active forms — namely,
the weak forms having endings beginning with consonants (including the
optative) — are said to come from a stem with weakened vowel, śiṣ
(as
do the aorist, 854, and some of the derivatives); but, excepting the
optative (śiṣyām
etc., U. S. and later), no such forms are quotable.
a. The 3d sing. impf. is aśāt
(555 a), and the same form is said to
be allowed also as 2d sing. The 2d sing. impv. is śādhí
(with total
loss of the s
); and RV. has the strong 2d pl. śāstána
(with
anomalous accent); and a
-forms, from stem (śāsa
, occasionally occur.
b. The middle inflection is regular, and the accent (apparently) always
upon the radical syllable (śā́ste, (śā́sate, śā́sāna
).
c. The root dāś
worship has in like manner (RV.) the pple dā́śat
(not dā́śant
).
640. The double so-called root jakṣ
eat, laugh is an evident
reduplication of ghas
and has
respectively. It has the absence of
n
in act. 3d persons pl. and pple, and the accent on the root before
vowel-endings, which belong to reduplicated verbs; and it also takes the
union-vowel i
in the manner of rud
etc. (above, 631). For its forms
and derivatives made with utter loss of the final sibilant, see 233 f.
641. Certain other obviously reduplicated verbs are treated by the
native grammarians as if simple, and referred to this conjugation: such
are the intensively reduplicated jāgṛ
(1020 a), daridrā
(1024 a),
and vevī
(1024 a), dīdhī
etc. (676), and cakās
(677).
II. Reduplicating Class (third, hu
-class).
642. This class forms its present-stem by prefixing a reduplication to the root.
643. a. As regards the consonant of the reduplication, the general rules which have already been given above (590) are followed.
b. A long vowel is shortened in the reduplicating syllable: thus,
ददा dadā
from √दा dā
; बिभी bibhī
from √भी bhī
; जुहू juhū
from
√हू hū
. The vowel ऋ ṛ
never appears in the reduplication, but is
replaced by इ i
: thus, बिभृ bibhṛ
from √भृ bhṛ
; पिपृच् pipṛc
from √पृच् pṛc
.
c. For verbs in which a
and ā
also are irregularly represented in
the reduplication by i
, see below, 660. The root vṛt
(V. B.) makes
vavartti
etc.; cakránt
(RV.) is very doubtful.
d. The only root of this class with initial vowel is ṛ
(or ar
); it
takes as reduplication i
, which is held apart from the root by an
interposed y
: thus, iyar
and iyṛ
(the latter has not been found in
actual use).
644. The present-stem of this class (as of the other classes belonging
to the first or non-a
-conjugation) has a double form: a stronger form,
with gunated root-vowel; and a weaker form, without guṇa
: thus, from
√हु hu
, the two forms are जुहो juho
and जुहु juhu
; from √भी bhī
,
they are बिभे bibhe
and बिभी bibhī
. And the rule for their use is
the same as in the other classes of this conjugation: the strong stem is
found before the unaccented endings (552), and the weak stem before the
accented.
645. According to all the analogies of the first general conjugation,
we should expect to find the accent upon the root-syllable when this is
strengthened. That is actually the case, however, only in a small
minority of the roots composing the class: namely, in hu, bhī
(no
test-forms in the older language), hrī
(no test-forms found in the
older language), mad
(very rare), jan
(no forms of this class found
to occur) , ci
notice (in V.), yu
separate (in older language
only), and in bhṛ
in the later language (in V. it goes with the
majority: but RV. has bibhárti
once, and AV. twice; and this, the
later accentuation, is found also in the Brāhmaṇas); and RV. has once
iyárṣi
. In all the rest — apparently, by a recent transfer — it rests
upon the reduplicating instead of upon the radical syllable. And in both
classes alike, the accent is anomalously thrown back upon the
reduplication in those weak forms of which the ending begins with a
vowel; while in the other weak forms it is upon the ending (but compare
666 a).
a. Apparently (the cases with written accent are too few to determine
the point satisfactorily) the middle optative endings, īya
etc. (566),
are reckoned throughout as endings with initial vowel, and throw back
the accent upon the reduplication.
646. The verbs of this class lose the न् n
in the 3d pl. endings in
active as well as middle, and in the imperfect have उस् us
instead of
अन् an
— and before this a final radical vowel has guṇa
.
1. Present Indicative.
647. The combination of stem and endings is as in the preceding class.
Examples of inflection: a. √हु hu
sacrifice: strong stem-form, जुहो
juhó
; weak form,जुहु juhu
(or júhu
).
active.
middle.
s.
d.
p.
s.
d.
p.
1
जुहोमि
juhómi
जुहुवस्
juhuvás
जुहुमस्
juhumás
जुह्वे
júhve
जुहुवहे
juhuváhe
जुहुमहे
juhumáhe
2
जुहोषि
juhóṣi
जुहुथस्
juhuthás
जुहुथ
juhuthá
जुहुषे
juhuṣé
जुह्वाथे
júhvāthe
जुहुध्वे
juhudhvé
3
जुहोति
juhóti
जुहुतस्
juhutás
जुह्वति
júhvati
जुहुते
juhuté
जुह्वाते
júhvāte
जुह्वते
júhvate
b. Root भृ bhṛ bear (given with Vedic accentuation): strong stem-form, बिभर् bíbhar; weak, बिभृ bibhṛ (or bíbhṛ).
1
बिभर्मि
bíbharmi
बिभृवस्
bibhṛvás
बिभृमस्
bibhṛmás
बिभ्रे
bíbhre
बिभृवहे
bibhṛváhe
बिभृमहे
bibhṛmáhe
2
बिभर्षि
bíbharṣi
बिभृथस्
bibhṛthás
बिभृथ
bibhṛthá
बिभृषे
bibhṛṣé
बिभ्राथे
bíbhrāthe
बिभृध्वे
bibhṛdhvé
3
बिभर्ति
bíbharti
बिभृतस्
bibhṛtás
बिभ्रति
bíbhrati
बिभृते
bibhṛté
बिभ्राते
bíbhrāte
बिभ्रते
bíbhrate
c. The u of hu (like that of the class-signs nu and u: see below, 697 a) is said to be omissible before v and m of the endings of 1st du. and pl.: thus, juhvás, juhváhe, etc.; but no such forms are quotable.
2. Present Subjunctive.
648. It is not possible at present to draw a distinct line between those subjunctive forms of the older language which should be reckoned as belonging to the present-system and those which should be assigned to the perfect — or even, in some cases, to the reduplicated aorist and intensive. Here will be noticed only those which most clearly belong to this class; the more doubtful cases will be treated under the perfect-system. Except in first persons (which continue in use as “imperatives” down to the later language), subjunctives from roots having unmistakably a reduplicated present-system are of far from frequent occurrence.
649. The subjunctive mode-stem is formed in the usual manner, with the mode-sign a and guṇa of the root-vowel, if this is capable of such strengthening. The evidence of the few accented forms met with indicates that the accent is laid in accordance with that of the strong indicative forms: thus, from √hu, the stem would be juháva; from √bhṛ, it would be bíbhara (but bibhára later). Before the mode-sign, final radical ā would be, in accordance with analogies elsewhere, dropped: thus, dáda from √dā, dádha from √dhā (all the forms actually occurring would be derivable from the secondary roots dad and dadh).
650. Instead of giving a theoretically complete scheme of inflection, it will be better to note all the examples quotable from the older language (accented when found so occurring).
a. Thus, of 1st persons, we have in the active juhávāni, bibharāṇi, dadāni, dadhāni, jahāni; juhavāma, dádhāma, jáhāma; — in the middle, dadhāi, mimāi; dadhāvahāi; juhavāmahāi, dadāmahe, dadāmahāi, dadhāmahāi.
b. Of other persons, we have with primary endings in the active
bibharāsi (with double mode-sign: 560 e), dádhathas, juhavātha (do.)
and juhavatha
; in the middle,
dádhase; dádhate, rárate, dádhātāi, dadātāi;
— with secondary endings,
dádhas, víveṣas, juhavat, bibharat, yuyávat, dádhat, dadhánat, babhasat; dadhan, yuyavan, juhavan
.
3. Present Optative.
651. To form this mode, the optative endings given above (566 a), as made up of mode-sign and personal endings, are added to the unstrengthened stem. The accent is as already stated (645 a). The inflection is so regular that it is unnecessary to give here more than the first persons of a single verb: thus,
active.
middle.
s.
d.
p.
s.
d.
p.
1
जुहुयाम्
juhuyā́m
जुहुयाव
juhuyā́va
जुहुयाम
juhuyā́ma
जुह्वीय
júhvīya
जुह्वीवहि
júhvīvahi
जुह्वीमहि
júhvīmahi
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
4. Present Imperative.
652. The endings, and the mode of their combination with the root, have
been already given. In 2d sing. act., the ending is हि hi
after a
vowel, but धि dhi
after a consonant: हु hu
, however, forms जुहुधि
juhudhí
(apparently, in order to avoid the recurrence of ह् h
in two
successive syllables): and other examples of धि dhi
after a vowel are
found in the Veda.
653. a. Example of inflection:
active.
middle.
s.
d.
p.
s.
d.
p.
1
जुहवानि
juhávāni
जुहवाव
juhávāva
जुहवाम
juhávāma
जुहवै
juhávāi
जुहवावहै
juhávāvahāi
जुहवामहै
juhávāmahāi
2
जुहुधि
juhudhí
जुहुतम्
juhutám
जुहुत
juhutá
जुहुष्व
juhuṣvá
जुह्वाथाम्
júhvāthām
जुहुध्वम्
juhudhvám
3
जुहोतु
juhótu
जुहुताम्
juhutā́m
जुह्वतु
júhvatu
जुहुताम्
juhutā́m
जुह्वाताम्
júhvātām
जुह्वताम्
júhvatām
b. The verbs of the other division differ here, as in the indicative,
in the accentuation of their strong forms only: namely, in all the
first persons (borrowed subjunctives), and in the 3d sing. act.: thus,
(in the older language) bíbharāṇi
etc., bíbhartu, bíbharāi
etc.
654. Vedic irregularities of inflection are: 1. the occasional use of
strong forms in 2d persons: thus, yuyodhí, śiśādhi
(beside śiśīhí
);
yuyotam
(beside yuyutám
); íyarta, dádāta
and dadātana, dádhāta
and dádhātana
(see below, 668), pipartana, juhóta
and
juhótana, yuyota
and yuyotana; rarāsva
(666); 2. the use of dhi
instead of hi
after a vowel (only in the two instances just quoted);
3. the ending tana
in 2d pl. act.: namely, besides those just given,
in
jigātana, dhattana, mamáttana, vivaktana, didiṣṭana, bibhītana, jujuṣṭana, juhutana, vavṛttana
:
the cases are proportionally much more numerous in this than in any
other class; 4. the ending tāt
in 2d sing. act., in
dattāt, dhattā́t, pipṛtāt, jahītāt
.
5. Present Participle.
655. As elsewhere, the active participle-stem may be made mechanically
from the 3d pl. indic. by dropping इ i
: thus, जुह्वत् júhvat
,
बिभ्रत् bíbhrat
. In inflection, it has no distinction of strong and
weak forms (444). The feminine stem ends in अती atī
. The middle
participles are regularly made: thus, जुह्वान júhvāna
, बिभ्राण
bíbhrāṇa
.
a. RV. shows an irregular accent in pipāná
(√pā
drink).
6. Imperfect.
656. As already pointed out, the 3d pl. act. of this class takes the
ending उस् us
, and a final radical vowel has guṇa
before it. The
strong forms are, as in present indicative, the three singular active
persons.
657. Examples of inflection:
active.
middle.
s.
d.
p.
s.
d.
p.
1
अजुहवम्
ájuhavam
अजुहुव
ájuhuva
अजुहुम
ájuhuma
अजुह्वि
ájuhvi
अजुहुवहि
ájuhuvahi
अजुहुमहि
ájuhumahi
2
अजुहोस्
ájuhos
अजुहुतम्
ájuhutam
अजुहुत
ájuhuta
अजुहुथास्
ájuhuthās
अजुह्वाथाम्
ájuhvāthām
अजुहुध्वम्
ájuhudhvam
3
अजुहोत्
ájuhot
अजुहुताम्
ájuhutām
अजुहवुस्
ájuhavus
अजुहुत
ájuhuta
अजुह्वाताम्
ájuhvātām
अजुह्वत
ájuhvata
a. From √भृ bhṛ
, the 2d and 3d sing. act. are अबिभर् ábibhar
(for
abibhar-s
and abibhar-t
) — and so in all other cases where the
strong stem ends in a consonant. The 3d pl. act. is अबिभरुस्
ábibharus
; and other like cases are ábibhayus
, acikayus
,
asuṣavus
.
b. In MS., once, abibhrus
is doubtless a false reading.
658. The usual Vedic irregularities in 2d pl. act. — strong forms, and
the ending tana
— occur in this tense also: thus, ádadāta
,
ádadhāta
; ádattana
, ájahātana
. The RV. has also once apiprata
for apipṛta
in 3d sing. mid., and abibhran
for abibharus
in 3d pl.
act. Examples of augmentless forms are śiśās
, vivés
, jígāt
;
jíhīta
, śíśīta
, jihata
; and, with irregular strengthening,
yuyoma
(AV.), yuyothās
, yuyota
.
659. The roots that form their present-stem by reduplication are a very small class, especially in the modern language; they are only 50, all told, and of these only a third (16) are met with later. It is, however, very difficult to determine the precise limits of the class, because of the impossibility (referred to above, under subjunctive: 648) of always distinguishing its forms from those of other reduplicating conjugations and parts of conjugations.
a. Besides the irregularities in tense-inflection already pointed out, others may be noticed as follows.
Irregularities of the Reduplicating Class.
660. Besides the roots in ṛ
or ar
— namely, ṛ
, ghṛ
(usually
written ghar
), tṛ, pṛ, bhṛ, sṛ, hṛ, pṛc
— the following roots having
a
or ā
as radical vowel take i
instead of a
in the reduplicating
syllable: gā
go, mā
measure, mā
bellow, śā
, hā
remove
(mid.), vac, sac; vaś
. has both i
and a
; rā
has i
once in RV.;
for sthā
, pā
drink ghrā
, han
, hi
, see below (670–4).
661. Several roots of this class in final ā
change the ā
in weak
forms to ī
(occasionally even to i
), and then drop it altogether
before endings beginning with a vowel.
a. This is in close analogy with the treatment of the vowel of the
class-sign of the nā
-class: below, 717.
These roots are:
662. śā
sharpen, act. and mid.: thus, śiśāti
, śiśīmasi
,
śiśīhí
(also śiśādhi
: above, 654), śiśātu
, aśiśāt
, śíśīte
,
śíśīta
.
663. mā
bellow, act., and mā
measure, mid. (rarely also act.):
thus, mimāti
, mimīyāt
; mímīte
, mimate
, ámimīta
; mimīhi
,
mímātu
. RV. has once mimanti 3d pl. (for mimati
).
664. hā
remove, mid.: thus,
jíhīte, jihīdhve, jíhate; jihīṣva, jihatām; ájihīta, ajihata
. śB. has
jihīthām
(for jihāthām
).
665. hā
quit, act. (originally identical with the former), may
further shorten the ī
to i
: thus, jahāti, jahīta, jahītāt
(AV.);
jahimas
(AV.), jahitas
(TB.), jahitam
(TA.), ajahitām (TS. AB.).
In the optative, the radical vowel is lost altogether; thus,
jahyām, jahyus
(AV.). The 2d sing. impv., according to the
grammarians, is jahīhi
or jahihi
or jahāhi
; only the first appears
quotable.
a. Forms from an a
-stem, jaha
, are made for this root, and even
derivatives from a quasi-root jah
.
666. rā
give, mid.: thus, rarīdhvam, rarīthās
(impf. without
augment); and, with i
in reduplication, rirīhi
. But AV. has
rarāsva
.
a. In these verbs, the accent is generally constant on the reduplicating syllable.
667. The two roots dā
and dhā
(the commonest of the class) lose
their radical vowel altogether in the weak forms, being shortened to
dad
and dadh
. In 2d sing. impv. act., they form respectively dehí
and dhehí
. In combination with a following t
or th
, the final dh
of dadh
does not follow the special rule of combination of a final
sonant aspirate (becoming ddh
with the t
or th
: 160), but — as
also before s
and dhv
— the more general rules of aspirate and of
surd and sonant combination; and its lost aspiration is thrown back upon
the initial of the root (155).
668. The inflection of √dhā
is, then, as follows:
Present Indicative
active.
middle.
s.
d.
p.
s.
d.
p.
1
dádhāmi
dadhvás
dadhmás
dadhé
dádhvahe
dádhmahe
2
dádhāsi
dhatthás
dhatthá
dhatsé
dadhāthe
dhaddhve
3
dádhāti
dhattás
dádhati
dhatté
dadhā́te
dádhate
Present Optative.
1
dadhyā́m
dadhyā́va
dadhyā́ma
dádhīya
dádhīvahi
dádhīmahi
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
Present Imperative.
1
dádhāni
dádhāva
dádhāma
dádhāi
dádhāvahāi
dádhāmahāi
2
dhehí
dhattám
dhattá
dhatsva
dadhāthām
dhaddhvam
3
dádhātu
dhattā́m
dádhatu
dhattām
dadhātām
dadhatām
Imperfect.
1
ádadhām
ádadhva
ádadhma
ádadhi
ádadhvahi
ádadhmahi
2
ádadhās
ádhattam
ádhatta
ádhatthās
ádadhāthām
ádhaddhvam
3
ádadhāt
ádhattām
ádadhus
ádhatta
ádadhātām
ádadhata
Participles: act. dádhat
; mid. dádhāna
.
a. In the middle (except impf.), only those forms are here accented for
which there is authority in the accentuated texts, as there is
discordance between the actual accent and that which the analogies of
the class would lead us to expect. RV. has once dhátse
: dadhé
and
dadhā́te
might be perfects, so far as the form is concerned. RV.
accents dadhītá
once (dádhīta
thrice); several other texts have
dádhīta
, dádhīran
, dádīta.
b. The root dā
is inflected in precisely the same way, with change
everywhere of (radical) dh
to d
.
669. The older language has irregularities as follows: 1. the usual
strong forms in 2d pl., dádhāta
and ádadhāta
, dádāta
and
ádadāta
; 2. the usual tana
endings in the same person, dhattana
,
dádātana
, etc. (654, 658); 3. the 3d sing. indic. act. dadhé
(like
1st sing.); 4. the 2d sing. impv. act. daddhí
(for both dehi
and
dhehi
). And R. has dadmi
.
670. A number of roots have been transferred from this to the a
- or
bhū
-class (below, 749), their reduplicated root becoming a stereotyped
stem inflected after the manner of a
-stems. These roots are as
follows:
671. In all periods of the language, from the roots sthā
stand,
pā
drink, and ghrā
smell, are made the presents tíṣṭhāmi
,
píbāmi
(with irregular sonantizing of the second p
), and jíghrāmi
— which then are inflected not like mímāmi
, but like bhávāmi
, as if
from the present-stems tíṣṭha
, píba
, jíghra
.
672. In the Veda (especially; also later), the reduplicated roots dā
and dhā
are sometimes turned into the a
-stems dáda
and dádha
, or
inflected as if roots dad
and dadh
of the a
-class; and single
forms of the same character are made from other roots: thus, mimanti
(√mā
bellow), rárate
(√rā
give: 3d sing. mid.).
673. In the Veda, also, a like secondary stem, jighna
, is made from
√han
(with omission of the radical vowel, and conversion, usual in
this root, of h
to gh
when in contact with n
: 637); and some of
the forms of saśc
, from √sac
, show the same conversion to an
a
-stem, saśca
.
674. In AB. (viii. 28), a similar secondary form, jighya
, is given to
√hi
or hā
: thus, jighyati
, jighyatu
.
675. A few so-called roots of the first or root-class are the products
of reduplication, more or less obvious: thus, jakṣ
(640), and probably
śās
(from √śas
) and cakṣ
(from √kāś
or a lost root kas
see).
In the Veda is found also saśc
, from √sac
.
676. The grammarians reckon (as already noticed, 641) several roots of
the most evidently reduplicate character as simple, and belonging to the
root-class. Some of these (jāgṛ
, daridrā
, vevī
) are regular
intensive stems, and will be described below under Intensives (1020 a,
1024 a); dīdhī
shine, together with Vedic dīdī
shine and pīpī
swell, are sometimes also classed as intensives; but they have not the
proper reduplication of such, and may perhaps be best noticed here, as
reduplicated present-stems with irregularly long reduplicating vowel.
a. Of pres. indic. occurs in the older language only dīdyati
, 3d pl.,
with the pples dī́dyat
and dī́dhyat
, and mid. dīdye
, dīdhye
,
dīdhyāthām
, with the pples dī́dyāna
, dī́dhyāna
, pī́pyāna
. The subj.
stems are dīdáya
, dīdhaya
, pīpáya
, and from them are made forms
with both primary (from dīdáya
) and secondary endings (and the
irregularly accented dī́dayat
and dīdāyat
and dī́dhayan
). No opt.
occurs. In impv. we have dīdihí
(and didīhí
) and pīpihí
, and
pipyatam
, pipyatām
, pipyata
. In impf., adīdes
and pīpes
,
ádīdet
and ádīdhet
and apīpet
(with augmentless forms), apīpema
(with strong form of root), and adīdhayus
and (irregular) apīpyan
.
b. A few forms from all the three show transfer to an a
-inflection:
thus, dīdhaya
and pīpaya
(impv.), ápīpayat
, etc.
c. Similar forms from √mī
bellow are amīmet
and mīmayat
.
677. The stem cakās
shine (sometimes cakāś
) is also regarded by
the grammarians as a root, and supplied as such with tenses outside the
present-system — which, however, hardly occur in genuine use. It is not
known in the older language.
678. The root bhas
chew loses its radical vowel in weak forms,
taking the form baps
: thus, bábhasti
, but bápsati
(3d pl.),
bápsat
(pple). For babdhām
, see 233 f.
679. The root bhī
fear is allowed by the grammarians to shorten its
vowel in weak forms: thus, bibhīmas
or bibhimas
, bibhīyām
or
bibhiyām
; and bibhiyāt
etc. are met with in the later language.
680. Forms of this class from √jan
give birth, with added i
—
thus, jajñiṣe
, jajñidhve
— are given by the grammarians, but have
never been found in use.
681. The roots ci
and cit
have in the Veda reversion of c
to k
in the root-syllable after the reduplication: thus, cikéṣi
, cikéthe
(anomalous, for cikyā́the
), cikitām
, aciket
, cíkyat
(pple);
cikiddhi
.
682. The root vyac
has i
in the reduplication (from the y
), and
is contracted to vic
in weak forms: thus, viviktás
, áviviktām
. So
the root hvar
(if its forms are to be reckoned here) has u
in
reduplication, and contracts to hur
: thus, juhūrthās
.
III. Nasal Class (seventh, rudh
-class).
683. The roots of this class all end in consonants. And their
class-sign is a nasal preceding the final consonant: in the weak forms,
a nasal simply, adapted in character to the consonant; but in the strong
forms expanded to the syllable न ná
, which has the accent.
a. In a few of the verbs of the class, the nasal extends also into
other tense-systems: they are añj, bhañj, hiṅs
: see below, 694.
1. Present Indicative.
684. Examples of inflection: a. the root युज् yuj
join: strong
stem-form, युनज् yunáj
; weak, युञ्ज् yuñj
.
For the rules of combination of final j
, see 219.
active.
middle.
s.
d.
p.
s.
d.
p.
1
युनज्मि
yunájmi
युञ्ज्वस्
yuñjvás
युञ्ज्मस्
yuñjmás
युञ्जे
yuñjé
युञ्ज्वहे
yuñjváhe
युञ्ज्महे
yuñjmáhe
2
युनक्षि
yunákṣi
युङ्क्थस्
yun̄kthás
युङ्क्थ
yun̄kthá
युङ्क्षे
yun̄kṣé
युञ्जाथे
yuñjā́the
युङ्ग्ध्वे
yun̄gdhvé
3
युनक्ति
yunákti
युङ्क्तस्
yun̄ktás
युञ्जन्ति
yuñjánti
युङ्क्ते
yun̄kté
युञ्जाते
yuñjā́te
युञ्जते
yuñjáte
b. the root रुध् rudh
obstruct; bases रुणध् ruṇadh
and रुन्ध्
rundh
.
For rules of combination of final dh
, see 153, 160.
1
रुणध्मि
ruṇádhmi
रुन्ध्वस्
rundhvás
रुन्ध्मस्
rundhmás
रुन्धे
rundhé
रुन्ध्वहे
rundhváhe
रुन्ध्महे
rundhmáhe
2
रुणत्सि
ruṇátsi
रुन्द्धस्
runddhás
रुन्द्ध
runddhá
रुन्त्से
runtsé
रुन्धाथे
rundhā́the
रुन्द्ध्वे
runddhvé
3
रुणद्धि
ruṇáddhi
रुन्द्धस्
runddhás
रुन्धन्ति
rundhánti
रुन्द्धे
runddhé
रुन्धाते
rundhā́te
रुन्धते
rundháte
c. Instead of yun̄kthas, yun̄gdhve
, and the like (here and in the impv.
and impf.), it is allowed and more usual (231) to write
yun̄thas, yun̄dhve
, etc.; and, in like manner, rundhas, rundhe,
for
runddhas, runddhe
; and so in other like cases.
685. Vedic irregularities of inflection are: 1. the ordinary use of a
3d sing. mid. like the 1st sing., as vṛñje
; 2. the accent on té
of
3d pl. mid. in añjaté, indhaté, bhuñjaté
.
a. Yunañkṣi
, in BhP., is doubtless a false reading.
2. Present Subjunctive.
686. The stem is made, as usual, by adding a
to the strong
present-stem: thus, yunája, ruṇádha
. Below are given as if made from
√yuj
all the forms for which examples have been noted as actually
occurring in the older language.
active.
middle.
s.
d.
p.
s.
d.
p.
1
yunájāni
yunájāva
yunájāma
yunajāi
yunájāmahāi
2
yunájas
yunajādhvāi
3
yunájat
yunájatas
yunájan
yunájate
687. The RV. has once añjatas
, which is anomalous as being made from
the weak tense-stem. Forms with double mode-sign are met with: thus,
tṛṇáhān
(AV.), rādhnávāt
and yunajān
(śB.); and the only quotable
example of 3d du. act. (besides añjatás
) is hinásātas
(śB.). śB. has
also hinasāvas
as 1st du. act.: an elsewhere unexampled form.
3. Present Optative.
688. The optative is made, as elsewhere, by adding the compounded mode-endings to the weak form of present-stem. Thus:
active.
middle.
s.
d.
p.
s.
d.
p.
1
युञ्ज्याम्
yuñjyā́m
युञ्ज्याव
yuñjyā́va
युञ्ज्याम
yuñjyā́ma
युञ्जीय
yuñjīyá
युञ्जीवहि
yuñjīváhi
युञ्जीमहि
yuñjīmáhi
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
a. AB. has once the anomalous 1st sing. act. vṛñjīyam
. And forms like
bhuñjīyām -yāt, yuñjīyāt
, are here and there met with in the epics
(bhuñjīyātām
once in GGS.). MBh., too, has once bhuñjītam
.
4. Present Imperative.
689. In this class (as the roots all end in consonants) the ending of
the 2d sing. act. is always धि dhi
.
active.
middle.
s.
d.
p.
s.
d.
p.
1
युनजानि
yunájāni
युनजाव
yunájāva
युनजाम
yunájāma
युनजै
yunájāi
युनजावहै
yunájāvahāi
युनजामहै
yunájāmahāi
2
युङ्ग्धि
yun̄gdhí
युङ्क्तम्
yun̄ktám
युङ्क्त
yun̄ktá
युङ्क्ष्व
yun̄kṣvá
युञ्जाथाम्
yuñjā́thām
युङ्ग्ध्वम्
yun̄gdhvám
3
युनक्त्तु
yunáktu
युङ्क्ताम्
yun̄ktā́m
युञ्जन्तु
yuñjántu
युङ्क्ताम्
yun̄ktā́m
युञ्जाताम्
yuñjā́tām
युञ्जताम्
yuñjátām
690. There is no occurrence, so far as noted, of the ending tāt
in
verbs of this class. The Veda has, as usual, sometimes strong forms, and
sometimes the ending tana
, in the 2d pl. act.: thus,
unátta, yunákta, anaktana, pinaṣṭana
.
5. Present Participle.
691. The participles are made in this class as in the preceding ones:
thus, act. युञ्जन्त् yuñjánt
(fem. युञ्जती yuñjatī́
); mid. युञ्जान
yuñjāná
(but RV. has índhāna).
6. Imperfect.
692. The example of the regular inflection of this tense needs no introduction:
active.
middle.
s.
d.
p.
s.
d.
p.
1
अयुनजम्
áyunajam
अयुञ्ज्व
áyuñjva
अयुञ्ज्म
áyuñjma
अयुञ्जि
áyuñji
अयुञ्ज्वहि
áyuñjvahi
अयुञ्ज्महि
áyuñjmahi
2
अयुनक्
áyunak
अयुङ्क्तम्
áyun̄ktam
अयुङ्क्त
áyun̄kta
अयुङ्क्थास्
áyun̄kthās
अयुञ्जाथाम्
áyuñjāthām
अयुङ्ग्ध्वम्
áyun̄gdhvam
3
अयुनक्
áyunak
अयुङ्क्ताम्
áyun̄ktām
अयुञ्जन्
áyuñjan
अयुङ्क्त
áyun̄kta
अयुञ्जाताम्
áyuñjātām
अयुञ्जत
áyuñjata
a. The endings s
and t
are necessarily lost in the nasal class
throughout in 2d and 3d sing. act., unless saved at the expense of the
final radical consonant: which is a case of very rare occurrence (the
only quotable examples were given at 555 a).
693. The Veda shows no irregularities in this tense. Occurrences of
augmentless forms are found, especially in 2d and 3d sing. act., showing
an accent like that of the present: for example,
bhinát, pṛṇák, vṛṇák, piṇák, riṇák
.
a. The 1st sing. act. atṛṇam
and acchinam
(for atṛṇadam
and
acchinadam
) were noted above, at 555 a.
694. The roots of this class number about thirty, more than half of
them being found only in the earlier language; no new ones make their
first appearance later. Three of them, añj
and bhañj
and hiṅs
,
carry their nasal also into other tense-systems than the present. Two,
ṛdh
and ubh
, make present-systems also of other classes having a
nasal in the class-sign: thus, ṛdhnoti
(nu
-class) and ubhnāti
(nā
-class).
a. Many of the roots make forms from secondary a
-stems: thus, from
añja, unda, umbhá, chinda, tṛṅhá, piṅṣa, pṛñcá, bhuñja, rundha, śiṅṣá,
etc.
Irregularities of the Nasal Class.
695. The root tṛh
combines tṛṇah
with ti, tu
, etc. into
tṛṇeḍhi, tṛṇéḍhu
; and, according to the grammarians, has also such
forms as tṛṇehmi
: see above, 224 b.
696. The root hiṅs
(by origin apparently a desiderative from √han
)
accents irregularly the root-syllable in the weak forms: thus,
híṅsanti, híṅste, híṅsāna
(but hinásat
etc. and hiṅsyā́t
śB.).
IV. Nu
- and u
-classes (fifth and eighth, su
- and tan
-classes).
697. A. The present-stem of the nu
-class is made by adding to the
root the syllable नु nu
, which then in the strong forms receives the
accent, and is strengthened to नो nó
.
B. The few roots of the u
-class (about half-a-dozen) end in न् n
,
with the exception of the later irregular कृ kṛ
(or kar
) — for
which, see below, 714. The two classes, then, are closely correspondent
in form; and they are wholly accordant in inflection.
a. The u
of either class-sign is allowed to be dropped before v
and
m
of the 1st du. and 1st pl. endings, except when the root
(nu
-class) ends in a consonant; and the u
before a vowel-ending
becomes v
or uv
, according as it is preceded by one or by two
consonants (129 a).
1. Present Indicative.
698. Examples of inflection: A. nu
-class; root सु su
press out:
strong form of stem, सुनो sunó
; weak form, सुनु sunu
.
active.
middle.
s.
d.
p.
s.
d.
p.
1
सुनोमि
sunómi
सुनुवस्
sunuvás
सुनुमस्
sunumás
सुन्वे
sunvé
सुनुवहे
sunuváhe
सुनुमहे
sunumáhe
2
सुनोषि
sunóṣi
सुनुथस्
sunuthás
सुनुथ
sunuthá
सुनुषे
sunuṣé
सुन्वाथे
sunvā́the
सुनुध्वे
sunudhvé
3
सुनोति
sunóti
सुनुतस्
sunutás
सुन्वन्ति
sunvánti
सुनुते
sunuté
सुन्वाते
sunvā́te
सुन्वते
sunváte
a. The forms sunvás, sunmás, sunváhe, sunmáhe
are alternative with
those given here for 1st du. and pl., and in practice are more common.
From √āp
, however (for example), only the forms with u
can occur:
thus, āpnuvás, āpnumáhe
; and also only āpnuvánti, āpnuvé, āpnuváte
.
B. u
-class; root तन् tan
stretch: strong form of stem, तनो tanó
;
weak, तनु tanu
.
1
तनोमि
tanómi
तन्वस्
tanvás
तन्मस्
tanmás
तन्वे
tanvé
तन्वहे
tanváhe
तन्महे
tanmáhe
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
b. The inflection is so precisely like that given above that it is not worth writing out in full. The abbreviated forms in 1st du. and pl. are presented here, instead of the fuller, which rarely occur (as no double consonant ever precedes).
699. a. In the older language, no strong 2d persons du. or pl., and no
thana
-endings, chance to occur (but they are numerous in the impv. and
impf.: see below). The RV. has several cases of the irregular accent in
3d pl. mid.: thus, kṛṇvaté, tanvaté, manvaté, vṛṇvaté, spṛṇvaté
.
b. In RV. occur also several 3d pl. mid. in ire
from present-stems of
this class: thus, invire, ṛṇvire, pinvire, śṛṇviré, sunviré, hinviré
.
Of these, pinvire
and hinviré
might be perfects without
reduplication from the secondary roots pinv
and hinv
(below, 716).
The 2d sing. mid. (with passive value) śṛṇviṣé
(RV.) is of anomalous
and questionable character.
2. Present Subjunctive.
700. The subjunctive mode-stem is made in the usual manner, by adding
a
to the gunated and accented class-sign: thus, sunáva, tanáva
. In
the following scheme are given all the forms of which examples have been
met with in actual use in the older language from either division of the
class; some of them are quite numerously represented there.
active.
middle.
s.
d.
p.
s.
d.
p.
1
sunávāni
sunávāva
sunávāma
sunávāi
sunávāvahāi
sunávāmahāi
2
sunávas
sunávatha
sunávase
sunávāithe
3
sunávat
sunávan
sunávate
sunávātāi
sunávanta
701. Of the briefer 1st sing. act., RV. has kṛṇavā
and hinavā
.
Forms with double mode-sign occur (not in RV.): thus, kṛṇávāt
and
karavāt
(AV.); aśnavātha
(K.), kṛṇavātha
(VS.; but -vatha
in
Kāṇva-text), karavātha
(śB.). On the other hand, aśnavatāi
is found
once (in TS.). Forms like āpnuvāni, ardhnúvat, aśnuvat
, met with now
and then in the older texts, are doubtless to be regarded as false
readings. RV. has in a single passage kṛṇvāíte
(instead of
kṛṇávāite
); the only form in āithe
is aśnávāithe
.
3. Present Optative.
702. The combined endings (566) are added, as usual, to the weak tense-stem: thus,
active.
middle.
s.
d.
p.
s.
d.
p.
1
सुनुयाम्
sunuyā́m
सुनुयाव
sunuyā́va
सुनुयाम
sunuyā́ma
सुन्वीय
sunvīyá
सुन्वीवहि
sunvīváhi
सुन्वीमहि
sunvīmáhi
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
a. From √āp
, the middle optative would be āpnuvīyá
— and so in
other like cases.
4. Present Imperative.
703. The inflection of the imperative is in general like that in the
preceding classes. As regards the 2d sing. act., the rule of the later
language is that the ending हि hi
is taken whenever the root itself
ends in a consonant; otherwise, the tense- (or mode-) stem stands by
itself as 2d person (for the earlier usage, see below, 704). An example
of inflection is:
active.
middle.
s.
d.
p.
s.
d.
p.
1
सुनवानि
sunávāni
सुनवाव
sunávāva
सुनवाम
sunávāma
सुनवै
sunávāi
सुनवावहै
sunávāvahāi
सुनवामहै
sunávāmahāi
2
सुनु
sunú
सुनुतम्
sunutám
सुनुत
sunutá
सुनुष्व
sunuṣvá
सुन्वाथाम्
sunvā́thām
सुनुध्वम्
sunudhvám
3
सुनोतु
sunótu
सुनुताम्
sunutā́m
सुन्वन्तु
sunvántu
सुनुताम्
sunutā́m
सुन्वाताम्
sunvā́tām
सुन्वताम्
sunvátām
a. From √āp
, the 2d sing. act. would be āpnuhí
; from √aś
aśnuhí
; from √dhṛṣ
, dhṛṣṇuhí
; and so on. From √āp
, too, would be
made āpnuvántu, āpnuvā́thām, āpnuvā́tām, āpnuvátām
.
704. In the earliest language, the rule as to the omission of hi
after a root with final vowel does not hold good: in RV., such forms as
inuhi, kṛṇuhí, cinuhí, dhūnuhi, śṛṇuhí, spṛṇuhi, hinuhi
, and
tanuhi, sanuhi
, are nearly thrice as frequent in use as
inú, śṛṇu, sunú, tanu
, and their like; in AV., however, they are only
one sixth as frequent; and in the Brāhmaṇas they appear only
sporadically: even śṛṇudhí
(with dhi
) occurs several times in RV.
RV. has the 1st sing. act. hinavā
. The ending tāt
is found in
kṛṇutāt
and hinutāt
, and kurutāt
. The strong stem-form is found in
2d du. act. in hinotam
and kṛṇotam
; and in 2d pl. act. in kṛṇóta
and kṛṇótana, śṛṇóta
and śṛṇotana, sunóta
and sunótana, hinóta
and
hinotana
, and tanota, karóta
. The ending tana
occurs only in the
forms just quoted.
5. Present Participle.
705. The endings अन्त् ánt
and आन āná
are added to the weak form of
tense stem: thus, from √सु su
come act. सुन्वन्त् sunvánt
(fem.
सुन्वती sunvatī́
), mid. सुन्वान sunvāná
; from √तन् tan
, तन्वन्त्
tanvánt
(fem. तन्वती tanvatī́
), तन्वान tanvāná
. From √आप् āp
,
they are आप्नुवन्त् āpnuvánt
and आप्नुवान āpnuvāná
.
6. Imperfect.
706. The combination of augmented stem and endings is according to the rules already stated: thus,
active.
middle.
s.
d.
p.
s.
d.
p.
1
असुनवम्
ásunavam
असुनुव
ásunuva
असुनुम
ásunuma
असुन्वि
ásunvi
असुनुवहि
ásunuvahi
असुनुमहि
ásunumahi
2
असुनोस्
ásunos
असुनुतम्
ásunutam
असुनुत
ásunuta
असुनुथास्
ásunuthās
असुन्वाथाम्
ásunvāthām
असुनुध्वम्
ásunudhvam
3
असुनोत्
ásunot
असुनुताम्
ásunutām
असुन्वन्
ásunvan
असुनुत
ásunuta
असुन्वाताम्
ásunvātām
असुन्वत
ásunvata
a. Here, as elsewhere, the briefer forms
ásunva, ásunma, ásunvahi, ásunmahi
are allowed, and more usual, except
from roots with final consonant, as dhṛṣ
: which makes, for example,
always ádhṛṣṇuma
etc., and also
ádhṛṣṇuvan, ádhṛṣṇuvi, ádhṛṣṇuvāthām, ádhṛṣṇuvātām, ádhṛṣṇuvata
.
707. Strong stem-forms and tana
-ending are found only in RV., In
akṛṇota
, akṛṇotana
. Augmentless forms with accent are minván
,
ṛṇutá
.
708. About fifty roots make, either exclusively or in part, their
present-forms after the manner of the nu
-class: half of them do so
only in the older language; three or four, only in the later.
a. As to transfers to the a
-conjugation, see below, 716.
709. The roots of the other division, or of the u
-class, are
extremely few, not exceeding eight, even including tṛ
on account of
taruté
RV., and han
on account of the occurrence of hanomi
once in
a Sūtra (PGS. i. 3. 27). BR. refer the stem inu
to in
of the
u
-class instead of i
of the nu
-class.
Irregularities of the nu
and u
-classes.
710. The root tṛp
be pleased is said by the grammarians to retain
the n
of its class-sign unlingualized in the later language — where,
however, forms of conjugation of this class are very rare; while in the
Veda the regular change is made: thus, tṛpṇu
.
711. The root śru
hear is contracted to śṛ
before the class-sign,
forming śṛṇó
and śṛṇu
as stem. Its forms śṛṇviṣé
and śṛṇviré
have been noted above (699 b).
712. The root dhū
shake in the later language (and rarely in B. and
S.) shortens its vowel, making the stem-forms dhunó
and dhunu
(earlier dhūnó
, dhūnu
).
713. The so-called root ūrṇu
, treated by the native grammarians as
dissyllabic and belonging to the root-class (I.), is properly a
present-stem of this class, with anomalous contraction, from the root
vṛ
(or var
). In the Veda, it has no forms which are not regularly
made according to the nu
-class; but in the Brāhmaṇa language are found
sometimes such forms as ūrṇāuti
, as if from an u
-root of the root
class (626); and the grammarians make for it a perfect, aorist, future,
etc. Its 2d sing. impv. act. is ūrṇu
or ūrṇuhi
; its impf., āúrṇos
,
āurṇot
; its opt. mid., ūrṇuvīta
(K.) or ūrṇvītá
(TS.).
714. The extremely common root कृ kṛ
(or kar
) make is in the
later language inflected in the present-system exclusively according to
the u
-class (being the only root of that class not ending in न् n
).
It has the irregularity that in the strong form of stem it (as well as
the class-sign) has the guṇa
-strengthening, and that in the weak form
it is changed to kur
, so that the two forms of stem are करो karó
and कुरु kuru
. The class-sign उ u
is always dropped before of व् v
and म् m
of the 1st du. and pl., and also before य् y
of the opt.
act. Thus:
1. Present Indicative.
active.
middle.
s.
d.
p.
s.
d.
p.
1
करोमि
karómi
कुर्वस्
kurvás
कुर्मस्
kurmás
कुर्वे
kurvé
कुर्वहे
kurváhe
कुर्महे
kurmáhe
2
करोषि
karóṣi
कुरुथस्
kuruthás
कुरुथ
kuruthá
कुरुषे
kuruṣé
कुर्वाथे
kurvā́the
कुरुध्वे
kurudhvé
3
करोति
karóti
कुरुतस्
kurutás
कुर्वन्ति
kurvánti
कुरुते
kuruté
कुर्वाते
kurvā́te
कुर्वते
kurváte
2. Present Optative.
1
कुर्याम्
kuryā́m
कुर्याव
kuryā́va
कुर्याम
kuryā́ma
कुर्वीय
kurvīyá
कुर्वीवहि
kurvīváhi
कुर्वीमहि
kurvīmáhi
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
3. Present Imperative.
1
करवाणि
karávāṇi
करवाव
karávāva
करवाम
karávāma
करवै
karávāi
करवावहै
karávāvahāi
करवामहै
karávāmahāi
2
कुरु
kurú
कुरुतम्
kurutám
कुरुत
kurutá
कुरुष्व
kuruṣvá
कुर्वाथाम्
kurvā́thām
कुरुध्वम्
kurudhvám
3
करोतु
karótu
कुरुताम्
kurutā́m
कुर्वन्तु
kurvántu
कुरुताम्
kurutā́m
कुर्वाताम्
kurvā́tām
कुर्वताम्
kurvátām
4. Present Participle.
कुर्वन्त् kurvánt
(fem. कुर्वती kurvatī́
) कुर्वाण kurvāṇá
5. Imperfect.
1
अकरवम्
ákaravam
अकुर्व
ákurva
अकुर्म
ákurma
अकुर्वि
ákurvi
अकुर्वहि
ákurvahi
अकुर्महि
ákurmahi
2
अकरोस्
ákaros
अकुरुतम्
ákurutam
अकुरुत
ákuruta
अकुरुथास्
ákuruthās
अकुर्वाथाम्
ákurvāthām
अकुरुध्वम्
ákurudhvam
3
अकरोत्
ákarot
अकुरुताम्
ákurutām
अकुर्वन्
ákurvan
अकुरुत
ákuruta
अकुर्वाताम्
ákurvātām
अकुर्वत
ákurvata
715. In RV., this root is regularly inflected in the present-system
according to the nu
-class, making the stem-forms kṛṇó
and kṛṇu
;
the only exceptions are kurmas
once and kuru
twice (all in the tenth
book); in AV., the nu
-forms are still more than six times as frequent
as the u
-forms (nearly half of which, moreover, are in prose
passages); but in the Brāhmaṇa language and later, the u
-forms are
used to the exclusion of the others.
a. As 1st sing. pres. act. is found kurmi
in the epos.
b. What irregular forms from kṛ
as a verb of the nu
-class occur in
the older language have been already noticed above.
c. The isolated form taruté
, from √tṛ
, shows an apparent analogy
with these u
-forms from kṛ
.
716. A few verbs belonging originally to these classes have been
shifted, in part or altogether, to the a
-class, their proper
class-sign having been stereotyped as a part of the root.
a. Thus, in RV. we find forms both from the stem inu
(√i
or in
),
and also from ínva
, representing a derivative quasi-root inv
(and
these latter alone occur in AV.). So likewise forms from a stem ṛṇva
beside those from ṛṇu
(√ṛ
); and from hinva
beside those from
hinu
(√hi
). The so-called roots jinv
and pinv
are doubtless of
the same origin, although no forms from the stem pinu
are met with at
any period — unless pinvire
(above, 699 b) be so regarded; and AV. has
the participle pinvánt
, f. pinvatī́
. The grammarians set up a root
dhinv
, but only forms from dhi
(stem dhinu
) appear to occur in the
present-system (the aorist adhinvīt
is found in PB.).
b. Occasional a
-forms are met with also from other roots: thus,
cinvata
etc., dunvasva
.
V. Nā
-class (ninth or krī
-class).
717. The class-sign of this class is in the strong forms the syllable
ना nā́
, accented, which is added to the root; in the weak forms, or
where the accent falls upon the ending, it is नी nī
; but before the
initial vowel of an ending the ई ī
of नी nī
disappears altogether.
1. Present Indicative.
718. Example of inflection: root क्री krī
buy: strong form of stem,
क्रीणा krīṇā́
; weak form, क्रीणी krīṇī
(before a vowel, क्रीण्
krīṇ
).
active.
middle.
s.
d.
p.
s.
d.
p.
1
क्रीणामि
krīṇā́mi
क्रीणीवस्
krīṇīvás
क्रीणीमस्
krīṇīmás
क्रीणे
krīṇé
क्रीणीवहे
krīṇīváhe
क्रीणीमहे
krīṇīmáhe
2
क्रीणासि
krīṇā́si
क्रीणीथस्
krīṇīthás
क्रीणीथ
krīṇīthá
क्रीणीषे
krīṇīṣe
क्रीणाथे
krīṇā́the
क्रीणीध्वे
krīṇīdhvé
3
क्रीणाति
krīṇā́ti
क्रीणीतस्
krīṇītás
क्रीणन्ति
krīṇánti
क्रीणीते
krīṇīté
क्रीणाते
krīṇā́te
क्रीणते
krīṇáte
719. In the Veda, the 3d sing. mid. has the same form with the 1st in
gṛṇé
; the peculiar accent of 3d pl. mid. is seen in punaté
and
riṇaté
; and vṛṇīmahé
(beside vṛṇīmáhe
) occurs once in RV.
2. Present Subjunctive.
720. The subjunctive forms which have been found exemplified in Veda and Brāhmaṇa are given below. The subjunctive mode-stem is, of course, indistinguishable in form from the strong tense-stem. And the 2d and 3d sing. act. (with secondary endings) are indistinguishable from augmentless imperfects.
active.
middle.
s.
d.
p.
s.
d.
p.
1
krīṇāni
krīṇā́ma
krīṇāí
krīṇāvahāi
krīṇāmahāi
2
krīṇā́s
krīṇātha
krīṇāsāi
3
krīṇā́t
krīṇā́n
krīṇātāi
krīṇāntāi
3. Present Optative.
721. This mode is formed and inflected with entire regularity; owing to the fusion of tense-sign and mode-sign in the middle, some of its persons are indistinguishable from augmentless imperfects. Its first persons are as follows:
active.
middle.
s.
d.
p.
s.
d.
p.
1
क्रीणीयाम्
krīṇīyā́m
क्रीणीयाव
krīṇīyā́va
क्रीणीयाम
krīṇīyā́ma
क्रीणीय
krīṇīyá
क्रीणीवहि
krīṇīváhi
क्रीणीमहि
krīṇīmáhi
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
4. Present Imperative.
722. The ending in 2d sing. act., as being always preceded by a vowel,
is हि hi
(never धि dhi
); and there are no examples of an omission of
it. But this person is forbidden to be formed in the classical language
from roots ending in a consonant; for both class-sign and ending is
substituted the peculiar ending आन āná
.
active.
middle.
s.
d.
p.
s.
d.
p.
1
क्रीणानि
krīṇā́ni
क्रीणाव
krīṇā́va
क्रीणाम
krīṇā́ma
क्रीणै
krīṇāí
क्रीणावहै
krīṇā́vahāi
क्रीणामहै
krīṇā́mahāi
2
क्रीणीहि
krīṇīhí
क्रीणीतम्
krīṇītám
क्रीणीत
krīṇītá
क्रीणीष्व
krīṇīṣvá
क्रीणाथाम्
krīṇā́thām
क्रीणीध्वम्
krīṇīdhvám
3
क्रीणातु
krīṇā́tu
क्रीणीताम्
krīṇītā́m
क्रीणन्तु
krīṇántu
क्रीणीताम्
krīṇītā́m
क्रीणाताम्
krīṇā́tām
क्रीणताम्
krīṇátām
a. Examples of the ending āná
in 2d sing. act. are
aśāna, gṛhāṇá, badhāná, stabhāná
.
723. The ending āna
is known also to the earliest language; of the
examples just given, all are found in AV., and the first two in RV.;
others are iṣāṇa, muṣāṇa, skabhāna
. But AV. has also gṛbhṇīhi
(also
AB.), and even gṛhṇāhi
, with strong stem; BhP. has badhnīhi
. Strong
stems are farther found in gṛṇāhi
and stṛṇāhi
(TS.), pṛṇāhi
(TB.),
and śrīṇāhi
(Āpast.), and, with anomalous accent, punāhí
and
śṛṇāhí
(SV.); and, in 2d pl. act., in punā́ta
(RV.). The ending tāt
of 2d sing. act. occurs in gṛhṇītāt, jānītā́t, punītāt
. The ending
tana
is found in punītána, pṛṇītana, śrīṇītana
.
5. Present Participle.
724. The participles are regularly formed: thus, for example, act.
क्रीणन्त् krīṇánt
(fem. क्रीणती krīṇatī́
); mid. क्रीणान krīṇāná
.
6. Imperfect.
725. There is nothing special to be noted as to the inflection of this tense: an example is —
active.
middle.
s.
d.
p.
s.
d.
p.
1
अक्रीणाम्
ákrīṇām
अक्रीणीव
ákrīṇīva
अक्रीणीम
ákrīṇīma
अक्रीणि
ákrīṇi
अक्रीणीवहि
ákrīṇīvahi
अक्रीणीमहि
ákrīṇīmahi
2
अक्रीणास्
ákrīṇās
अक्रीणीतम्
ákrīṇītam
अक्रीणीत
ákrīṇīta
अक्रीणीथास्
ákrīṇīthās
अक्रीणाथाम्
ákrīṇāthām
अक्रीणीध्वम्
ákrīṇīdhvam
3
अक्रीणात्
ákrīṇāt
अक्रीणीताम्
ákrīṇītām
अक्रीणन्
ákrīṇan
अक्रीणीत
ákrīṇīta
अक्रीणाताम्
ákrīṇātām
अक्रीणत
ákrīṇata
726. It has been pointed out above that augmentless persons of this
tense are in part indistinguishable in form from subjunctive and
optative persons. Such as certainly belong here are (in V.) kṣiṇām
;
aśnan
, riṇán
; gṛbhṇata
, vṛṇata
. The AV. has once minīt
instead
of mināt
. MBh. has aśnīs
after mā
.
a. AB. has the false form ajānīmas
, and in AA. occurs avṛṇīta
as 3d
plural.
727. The roots which form their present-systems, wholly or in part, after the manner of this class, are over fifty in number: but, for about three fifths of them, the forms are quotable only from the older language, and for half-a-dozen they make their first appearance later; for less than twenty are they in use through the whole life of the language, from the Veda down.
a. As to secondary a
-stems, see 731.
Irregularities of the na
-class.
728. a. The roots ending in ū
shorten that vowel before the
class-sign: thus, from √pū
, punā́ti
and punīté
; in like manner also
jū
, dhū
, lū
.
b. The root vlī
(B.S.) forms either vlīnā
or vlinā
.
729. The root grabh
or grah
(the former Vedic) is weakened to
gṛbh
or gṛh
.
a. As the perfect also in weak forms has gṛbh
or gṛh
, it is not
easy to see why the grammarians should not have written ṛ
instead of
ra
in the root.
730. a. A few of the roots have a more or less persistent nasal in
forms outside the present-system; such are without nasal before the
class-sign: thus, grath
or granth
, badh
or bandh
, math
or
manth
, skabh
or skambh
, stabh
or stambh
.
b. The root jñā
also loses its nasal before the class-sign: thus,
jānā́ti
, jānīté
.
731. Not rarely, forms showing a transfer to the a
-conjugation are
met with: thus, even in RV., minati
, minat
, aminanta
, from √mi
;
in AV., śṛṇa
from √śṛ
; later, gṛhṇa
, jāna
, prīṇa
, mathna
,
etc. And from roots pṛ
and mṛ
are formed the stems pṛṇá
and
mṛṇá
, which are inflected after the manner of the á
-class, as if
from roots pṛṇ
and mṛṇ
.
732. In the Veda, an apparently denominative inflection of a stem in
āyá
is not infrequent beside the conjugation of roots of this class:
thus, gṛbhāyá
, mathāyáti
, aśrathāyas
, skabhāyáta
, astabhāyat
,
pruṣāyánte
, muṣāyát
, and so on. See below, 1066 b.
Second or a
-Conjugation.
733. We come now to the classes which compose the Second or
a
-Conjugation. These are more markedly similar in their mode of
inflection than the preceding classes; their common characteristics,
already stated, may be here repeated in summary. They are: 1. A final
a
in the present-stem; 2. a constant accent, not changing between stem
and ending; 3. a briefer form of the optative mode-sign in the active,
namely ī
instead of yā
(combining in both voices alike with a
to
e
); 4. the absence of any ending (except when tāt
is used) in 2d
sing. impv. act.; 5. the conversion of initial ā
of the 2d and 3d du.
mid. endings to e
; 6. the use of the full endings ante
, anta
,
antām
in 3d pl. mid. forms; 7. the invariable use of an
(not us
)
in 3d pl. impf. act.; 8. and the use of māna
instead of āna
as
ending of the mid. pple. Moreover, 9. the stem-final a
becomes ā
before m
and v
of 1st personal endings — but not before am
of 1st
sing. impf.: here, as before the 3d pl. endings, the stem-final is lost,
and the short a
of the ending remains (or the contrary): thus,
bhávanti
(bháva+anti
), bhávante
(bháva+ante
), ábhavam
(ábhava+am
).
a. All these characteristics belong not to the inflection of the
a
-present-systems alone, but also to that of the a
-, reduplicated,
and sa
-aorists, the s
-future, and the desiderative, causative, and
denominative present-systems. That is to say, wherever in conjugation an
a
-stem is found, it is inflected in the same manner.
VI. A
-class (first, bhū
-class).
734. The present-stem of this class is made by adding अ a
to the
root, which has the accent, and, when that is possible (235, 240), is
strengthened to guṇa
. Thus, भव bháva
from √भू bhū
; जय jáya
from
√जि ji
; बोध bódha
from √बुध् budh
; सर्प sárpa
from √सृप् sṛp
;
— but वद váda
from √वद् vad
; क्रीड krī́ḍa
from √क्रीड् krīḍ
.
1. Present Indicative.
735. The endings and the rules for their combination with the stem have been already fully given, for this and the other parts of the present-system; and it only remains to illustrate them by examples.
a. Example of inflection: root भू bhū
be; stem भव bháva
(bho+a
:
131).
active.
middle.
s.
d.
p.
s.
d.
p.
1
भवामि
bhávāmi
भवावस्
bhávāvas
भवामस्
bhávāmas
भवे
bháve
भवावहे
bhávāvahe
भवामहे
bhávāmahe
2
भवसि
bhávasi
भवथस्
bhávathas
भवथ
bhávatha
भवसे
bhávase
भवेथे
bhávethe
भवध्वे
bhávadhve
3
भवति
bhávati
भवतस्
bhávatas
भवन्ति
bhávanti
भवते
bhávate
भवेते
bhávete
भवन्ते
bhávante
b. The V. has but a single example of the thana
-ending, namely
vádathana
(and no other in any class of this conjugation). The 1st pl.
mid. manāmahé
(RV., once) is probably an error. RV. has śóbhe
once
as 3d singular.
2. Present Subjunctive.
736. The mode-stem is bhávā
(bháva+a
). Subjunctive forms of this
conjugation are very numerous in the older language; the following
scheme instances all that have been found to occur.
active.
middle.
s.
d.
p.
s.
d.
p.
1
bhávāni
bhávāva
bhávāma
bhávāi
bhávāvahāi
bhávāmahāi
2
bhávāsi
bhávās
bhávāthas
bhávātha
bhávāse
bhávāsāi
bhávādhvāi
3
bhávāti
bhávāt
bhávātas
bhávān
bhávāte
bhávātāi
bhávāite
bhávanta
bhávāntāi
737. The 2d du. mid. (bhávāithe
) does not chance to occur in this
class; and yátāite
is the only example of the 3d person. No such pl.
mid. forms as bhávādhve, bhávānte
are made from any class with
stem-final a
; such as bhávanta
(which are very common) are, of
course, properly augmentless imperfects. The Brāhmaṇas (especially śB.)
prefer the 2d sing. act. in āsi
and the 3d in āt
. AB. has the 3d
sing. mid. haratāi
; and a 3d pl. in antāi
(vartantāi
KB.) has been
noted once. RV. has examples, arcā
and madā
, of the briefer 1st.
sing. act.
3. Present Optative.
738. The scheme of optative endings as combined with the final of an
a
-stem was given in full above (566).
active.
middle.
s.
d.
p.
s.
d.
p.
1
भवेयम्
bháveyam
भवेव
bháveva
भवेम
bhávema
भवेय
bháveya
भवेवहि
bhávevahi
भवेमहि
bhávemahi
2
भवेस्
bháves
भवेतम्
bhávetam
भवेत
bháveta
भवेथास्
bhávethās
भवेयाथाम्
bháveyāthām
भवेध्वम्
bhávedhvam
3
भवेत्
bhávet
भवेताम्
bhávetām
भवेयुस्
bháveyus
भवेत
bháveta
भवेयाताम्
bháveyātām
भवेरन्
bháveran
a. The RV. has once the 3d pl. mid. bharerata
(for one other example,
see 752 b). AV. has udeyam
from √vad
.
b. A few instances are met with of middle 3d persons from a
-stems in
īta
and (very rarely) īran
, instead of eta
and eran
. For
convenience, they may be put together here (excepting the more numerous
causative forms, for which see 1043 c); they are (so far as noted)
these: nayīta
S. and later, śaṅsīta
S., śrayīta
S.; dhayīta
S.,
dhyāyīta
U., hvayīta
AB. S. and hvayīran
S., dhmāyīta
U. An
active form śaṅsīyāt
C. is isolated and anomalous.
4. Present Imperative.
739. An example of the imperative inflection is:
active.
middle.
s.
d.
p.
s.
d.
p.
1
भवानि
bhávāni
भवाव
bhávāva
भवाम
bhávāma
भवै
bhávāi
भवावहै
bhávāvahāi
भवामहै
bhávāmahāi
2
भव
bháva
भवतम्
bhávatam
भवत
bhávata
भवस्व
bhávasva
भवेथाम्
bhávethām
भवध्वम्
bhávadhvam
3
भवतु
bhávatu
भवताम्
bhávatām
भवन्तु
bhávantu
भवताम्
bhávatām
भवेताम्
bhávetām
भवन्ताम्
bhávantām
740. The ending tana
in 2d pl. act. is as rare in this whole
conjugation as is thana
in the present: the V. affords only
bhajatana
in the a
-class (and nahyatana
in the ya
-class: 760 c).
The ending tāt
of 2d sing. act., on the other hand, is not rare; the
RV. has
avatāt, oṣatāt, dahatāt, bhavatāt, yacchatāt, yācatāt, rákṣatāt, vahatāt
;
to which AV. adds jinvatāt, dhāvatāt
; and the Brāhmanas bring other
examples. MS. has twice svadātu
(parallel texts both times svadāti
):
compare similar cases in the á
-class: 752 c.
5. Present Participle
741. The endings अन्त् ant
and मान māna
are added to the
present-stem, with loss, before the former, of the final stem-vowel:
thus, act. भवन्त् bhávant
(fem. भवन्ती bhávantī
); mid. भवमान
bhávamāna
.
a. A small number of middle participles appear to be made from stems of
this class (as of other a
-classes: see 752 e, 1043 f) by the suffix
āna
instead of māna
: thus,
namāna, pacāna, śikṣāṇa, svajāna, hvayāna
(all epic), majjāna
and
kaṣāṇa
(later); and there are Vedic examples (as
cyávāna, prathāná, yátāna or yatāná, śúmbhāna
, all RV.) of which the
character, whether present or aorist, is doubtful: compare 840, 852.
6. Imperfect.
742. An example of the imperfect inflection is:
active.
middle.
s.
d.
p.
s.
d.
p.
अभवम्
ábhavam
अभवाव
ábhavāva
अभवाम
ábhavāma
अभवे
ábhave
अभवावहि
ábhavāvahi
अभवामहि
ábhavāmahi
अभवस्
ábhavas
अभवतम्
ábhavatam
अभवत
ábhavata
अभवथास्
ábhavathās
अभवेथाम्
ábhavethām
अभवध्वम्
ábhavadhvam
अभवत्
ábhavat
अभवताम्
ábhavatām
अभवन्
ábhavan
अभवत
ábhavata
अभवेताम्
ábhavetām
अभवन्त
ábhavanta
743. No forms in tana
are made in this tense from any a
-class.
Examples of augmentless forms (which are not uncommon) are:
cyávam, ávas, dáhas, bódhat, bhárat, cáran, náśan; bādhathās, várdhata, śócanta
.
The subjunctively used forms of 2d and 3d sing. act. are more frequent
than those of either of the proper subjunctive persons.
744. A far larger number of roots form their present-system according
to the a
-class than according to any of the other classes: in the RV.,
they are about two hundred and forty (nearly two fifths of the whole
body of roots); in the AV., about two hundred (nearly the same
proportion); for the whole language, the proportion is still larger, or
nearly one half the whole number of present-stems: namely, over two
hundred in both earlier and later language, one hundred and seventy-five
in the older alone, nearly a hundred and fifty in the later alone. Among
these are not a few transfers from the classes of the first conjugation:
see those classes above. There are no roots ending in long ā
— except
a few which make an a
-stem in some anomalous way: below, 749 a.
Irregularities of the a
-class.
745. A few verbs have irregular vowel-changes in forming the present-stem: thus,
a. ūh
consider has guṇa
-strengthening (against 240): thus,
óhate
.
b. kṛp
(or krap
) lament, on the contrary, remains unchanged:
thus, ḱṛ́pate
.
c. guh
hide has prolongation instead of guṇa
: thus, ǵū́hati
.
d. kram
stride regularly lengthens its vowel in the active, but not
in the middle: thus, kŕā́mati, krámate
; but the vowel-quantities are
somewhat mixed up, even from the oldest language down; — klam
tire
is said to form klāmati
etc., but is not quotable; — cam
with the
preposition ā
rinse the mouth forms ́ā́cāmati
.
e. In the later language are found occasional forms of this class from
mṛj
wipe; and they show the same vṛddhi
(instead of guṇa
) which
belongs to the root in its more proper inflection (627): thus,
mārjasva
.
f. The grammarians give a number of roots in urv
, which they declare
to lengthen the u
in the present-stem. Only three are found in (quite
limited) use, and they show no forms anywhere with short u
. All appear
to be of secondary formation from roots in ṛ
or ar
. The root murch
or mūrch
coagulate has likewise only ū
in quotable forms.
g. The onomatopoetic root ṣṭhīv
spew is written by the grammarians
as ṣṭhiv
, and declared to lengthen its vowel in the present-system:
compare 240 b.
746. The roots daṅś
bite, rañj
color, sañj
hang, svañj
embrace, of which the nasal is in other parts of the conjugation not
constant, lose it in the present-system: thus, dáśati
etc.; sañj
forms both sajati
and sajjati
(probably for sajyati
, or for
sasjati
from sasajati
); math
or manth
has mathati
later. In
general, as the present of this class is a strengthening formation, a
root that has such a nasal anywhere has it here also.
747. The roots gam
go and yam
reach make the present-stems
gáccha
and yáccha
: thus, gácchāmi
etc.: see 608.
748. The root sad
sit forms śī́da
(conjectured to be contracted
from sisda
for sisada
: thus, śī́dāmi
etc.
749. Transfers to this class from other classes are not rare, as has been already pointed out above, both throughout the present-system and in occasional forms. The most important cases are the following:
a. The roots in ā, sthā
stand, pā
drink, and ghrā
smell,
form the present-stems tíṣṭha
(tíṣṭhāmi
etc.), píba
(píbāmi
etc.), and jíghra
(jíghrāmi
etc.): for these and other similar
cases, see 671–4.
b. Secondary root-forms like inv, jinv, pinv
, from simpler roots of
the nu
-class, are either found alongside their originals, or have
crowded these out of use: see 716.
750. On the other hand, the root dham
or dhmā
blow forms its
present-stem from the more original form of the root: thus, dhámati
etc.
VII. Accented á
-class (sixth, tud
-class).
751. The present-stem of this class has the accent on the class-sign अ
á
, and the root remains unstrengthened. In its whole inflection, it
follows so closely the model of the preceding class that to give the
paradigm in full will be unnecessary (only for the subjunctive, all the
forms found to occur will be instanced).
752. Example of inflection: root विश् viś
enter; stem विश viśá
:
1. Present Indicative.
active.
middle.
s.
d.
p.
s.
d.
p.
1
विशामि
viśā́mi
विशावस्
viśā́vas
विशामस्
viśā́mas
विशे
viśé
विशावहे
viśā́vahe
विशामहे
viśā́mahe
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
2. Present Subjunctive.
1
viśā́ni
viśā́va
viśā́ma
viśāí
viśā́vahāi
viśā́mahāi
2
viśā́si
viśā́s
viśā́tha
viśā́se
viśā́sāi
viśāíthe
3
viśā́ti
viśā́t
viśā́tas
viśā́n
viśā́te
viśā́tāi
viśāíte
viśā́ntāi
a. A single example of the briefer 1st sing. act. is mṛkṣā́
. The only
forms in āithe
and āite
are pṛṇāíthe
and yuvāíte
.
3. Present Optative.
active.
middle.
s.
d.
p.
s.
d.
p.
1
विशेयम्
viśéyam
विशेव
viśéva
विशेम
viśéma
विशेय
viśéya
विशेवहि
viśévahi
विशेमहि
viśémahi
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
b. The RV. has the ending tana
once in tiretana
2d pl. act., and
rata
in juṣerata
3d pl. mid.
4. Present Imperative.
The first persons having been given above as subjunctives, the second are added here:
2
विश
viśá
विशतम्
viśátam
विशत
viśáta
विशस्व
viśásva
विशेथाम्
viśéthām
विशध्वम्
viśádhvam
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
c. The ending tāt
is found in RV. and AV. in
mṛḍatāt, vṛhatāt, suvatāt
; other examples are not infrequent in the
Brāhmaṇa language: thus,
khidatāt, chyatāt, pṛcchatāt, viśatāt, sṛjatāt
; and later, spṛśatāt
.
The 3d sing. act nudātu
and muñcātu
occur in Sūtras (cf. 740).
5. Present Participle.
The active participle is विशन्त् viśánt
; the middle is विशमान
viśámāna
.
d. The feminine of the active participle is usually made from the
strong stem-form: thus, viśántī
; but sometimes from the weak: thus,
siñcántī and siñcatī́
(RV. and AV.), tudántī
and tudatī́
(AV.): see
above, 449 d, e.
e. Middle participles in āna
instead of māna
are
dhuvāná, dhṛṣāṇá, liśāna, śyāna
, in the older language;
kṛśāna, muñcāna, spṛśāna
in the later (cf. 741 a).
6. Imperfect.
1
अविशम्
áviśam
अविशाव
áviśāva
अविशाम
áviśāma
अविशे
áviśe
अविशावहि
áviśāvahi
अविशामहि
áviśāmahi
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
f. Examples of augmentless forms accented are sṛjás, sṛját, tiránta
.
g. The a
-aorist (846 ff.) is in general the equivalent, as regards
its forms, of an imperfect of this class.
753. Stems of the á
-class are made from nearly a hundred and fifty
roots: for about a third of these, in both the earlier and the later
language; for a half, in the earlier only; for the remainder, nearly
twenty, only in the later language. Among them are a number of transfers
from the classes of the non-a
-conjugation.
a. In some of these transfers, as pṛṇ
and mṛṇ
(731), there takes
place almost a setting-up of independent roots.
b. The stems icchá, ucchá
, and ṛcchá
are reckoned as belonging
respectively to the roots iṣ
desire, vas
shine, and ṛ
go.
c. The roots written by the Hindu grammarians with final o
— namely,
cho, do, śo
, and so
— and forming the present-stems chyá
,
dyá, śyá, syá
, are more properly (as having an accented á
in the
stem) to be reckoned to this class than to the ya
-class, where the
native classification puts them (see 761 g). They appear to be analogous
with the stems kṣya, sva, hva
, noted below (755).
754. The roots from which á
-stems are made have certain noticeable
peculiarities of form. Hardly any of them have long vowels, and none
have long interior vowels; very few have final vowels; and none (save
two or three transfers, and √lajj
be ashamed, which does not occur
in any accentuated text, and is perhaps to be referred rather to the
a
-class) have a
as radical vowel, except as this forms a combination
with r
, which is then reduced with it to ṛ
or some of the usual
substitutes of ṛ
.
Irregularities of the á
-class.
755. The roots in i
and u
and ū
change those vowels into iy
and
uv
before the class-sign: thus, kṣiyá, yuvá, ruvá; suvá
, etc.; and
sva, hva
occur, instead of suva
and huva
, in the older language,
while TS. has the participle kṣyánt
. K. has dhūva
from √dhū
.
756. The three roots in ṛ
form the present-stems kirá, girá
(also
gila
), tirá
, and are sometimes written as kir
etc.; and
gur, jur, tur
are really only varieties of gṛ, jṛ, tṛ
; and bhur
and sphur
are evidently related with other ar
or ṛ
root-forms.
a. The common root prach
ask makes the stem pṛcchá
.
757. As to the stems -driyá
and -priyá
, and mriyá
and dhriyá
,
sometimes reckoned as belonging to this class, see below, 773.
758. Although the present-stem of this class shows in general a weak
form of the root, there are nevertheless a number of roots belonging to
it which are strengthened by a penultimate nasal. Thus, the stem muñcá
is made from √muc
release; siñcá
from √sic
sprinkle; vindá
from √vid
find; kṛntá
from √kṛt
cut; piṅśá
from √piś
adorn; tṛmpá
from √tṛp
enjoy; lumpá
from √lup
break;
limpá
from √lip
smear; and occasional forms of the same kind are
met with from a few others, as tunda
from √tud
thrust; bṛṅhá
from √bṛh
strengthen; dṛṅhá
(beside dṛ́ṅha
) from √dṛh
make
firm; śumbhá
(beside śúmbha
) from √śubh
shine; TS. has
śṛnthati
from √śrath
(instead of śrathnāti
;
uñcha, vindhá, sumbha
, are of doubtful character.
a. Nasalized á
-stems are also in several instances made by transfer
from the nasal class: thus,
unda, umbha, ṛñjá, piṅṣá, yuñja, rundha, śiṅṣa
.
VIII. Ya
-class (fourth, div
-class).
759. The present-stem of this class adds य ya
to the accented but
unstrengthened root. Its inflection is also precisely like that of the
a
-class, and may be presented in the same abbreviated form as that of
the á
-class.
760. Example of inflection: root नह् nah
bind; stem नह्य náhya
.
1. Present Indicative.
1. Present Indicative.
active.
middle.
s.
d.
p.
s.
d.
p.
1
नह्यामि
náhyāmi
नह्यावस्
náhyāvas
नह्यामस्
náhyāmas
नह्ये
náhye
नह्यावहे
náhyāvahe
नह्यामहे
náhyāmahe
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
2. Present Subjunctive.
1
náhyāni
náhyāma
náhyāi
náhyāvahāi
náhyāmahāi
2
náhyāsináhyās
náhyāsāi
náhyādhvāi
3
náhyātináhyāt
náhyātas
náhyān
náhyātāi
náhyāntāi
a. A 3d pl. mid. in antāi
(jāyantāi
) occurs once in TS.
3. Present Optative.
1
नह्येयम्
náhyeyam
नह्येव
náhyeva
नह्येम
náhyema
नह्येय
náhyeya
नह्येवहि
náhyevahi
नह्येमहि
náhyemahi
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
b. For two or three 3d sing. mid. forms in īta
(for eta
), see 738
b.
4. Present Imperative.
2
नह्य
náhya
नह्यतम्
náhyatam
नह्यत
náhyata
नह्यस्व
náhyasva
नह्येथाम्
náhyethām
नह्यध्वम्
náhyadhvam
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
c. Of the ending tana
, RV. has one example, nahyatana
; the ending
tāt
is found in asyatāt, khyāyatāt, naśyatāt
.
5. Present Participle.
The active participle is नह्यन्त् náhyant
(fem. नह्यन्ती náhyantī
);
the middle is नह्यमान náhyamāna
.
6. Imperfect.
1
अनह्यम्
ánahyam
अनह्यव
ánahyava
अनह्याम
ánahyāma
अनह्ये
ánahye
अनह्यावहि
ánahyāvahi
अनह्यामहि
ánahyāmahi
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
etc.
d. Examples of augmentless forms showing the accent belonging to the
present-system are gā́yat, páśyat, páśyan, jā́yathās
.
761. The ya
-class stems are more than a hundred and thirty in number,
and nearly half of them have forms in use in all periods of the
language, about forty occurring only in the earlier, and about thirty
only in the modern period.
a. Of the roots making ya
-stems, a very considerable part (over
fifty) signify a state of feeling, or a condition of mind or body: thus,
kup
be angry, klam
be weary, kṣudh
be hungry, muh
be
confused, lubh
be lustful, śuṣ
be dry, etc. etc.
b. A further number have a more or less distinctly passive sense, and
are in part evident and in part presumable transfers from the passive or
yá
-class, with change of accent, and sometimes also with assumption of
active endings. It is not possible to draw precisely the limits of the
division; but there are in the older language a number of clear cases,
in which the accent wavers and changes, and the others are to be judged
by analogy with them. Thus, √muc
forms múcyate
once or twice, beside
the usual mucyáte
, in RV. and AV.; and in the Brāhmaṇas the former is
the regular accent. Similar changes are found also in ya
-forms from
other roots: thus, from kṣi
destroy, jī
or jyā
injure, tap
heat, dṛh
make firm, pac
cook, pṛ
fill, mī
damage,
ric
leave, lup
break, hā
leave. Active forms are early made
from some of these, and they grow more common later. It is worthy of
special mention that, from the Veda down, jā́yate
is born etc. is
found as altered passive or original ya
-formation by the side of
√jan
give birth.
c. A considerable body of roots (about forty) differ from the above in
having an apparently original transitive or neuter meaning: examples are
as
throw, nah
bind, paś
see, pad
go, śliṣ
clasp.
d. A number of roots, of various meaning, and of somewhat doubtful
character and relations, having present-stems ending in ya
, are by the
native grammarians written with final diphthongs, āi
or e
or o
.
Thus:
e. Roots reckoned as ending in āi
and belonging to the a
- (or
bhū-
) class, as gāi
sing (gā́yati
etc.). As these show
abundantly, and for the most part exclusively, ā
-forms outside the
present-system, there seems to be no good reason why they should not
rather be regarded as ā
-roots of the ya
-class. They are kṣā
burn, gā
sing, glā
be weary, trā
save, dhyā
think,
pyā
fill up, mlā
relax, rā
bark, vā
be blown, śyā
coagulate, śrā
boil, styā
stiffen. Some of them are evident
extensions of simpler roots by the addition of ā
. The secondary roots
tāy
stretch (beside tan
), and cāy
observe (beside ci
) appear
to be of similar character.
f. Roots reckoned as ending in e
and belonging to the a-
(or
bhū-
) class, as dhe
suck (dháyati
etc.). These, too, have
ā
-forms, and sometimes ī
-forms, outside the present system, and are
best regarded as ā
-roots, either with ā
weakened to a
before the
class-sign of this class, or with ā
weakened to ī
or i
and
inflected according to the a
-class. They are dhā
suck, mā
exchange, vā
weave, vyā
envelop, hvā
call (secondary, from
hū
). As of kindred form may be mentioned day
share and vyay
expend (probably denominative of vyaya
).
g. A few roots artificially written with final o
and reckoned to the
ya
-class, with radical vowel lost before the class-sign: thus, do
cut, bind, pres. dyáti
etc. These, as having an accented á
in
the sign, have plainly no right to be put in this class; and they are
better referred to the á
-class (see above, 753 c). Outside the
present-system they show ā-
and i
-forms; and in that system the ya
is often resolved into ia
in the oldest language.
762. The ya
-class is the only one thus far described which shows any
tendency toward a restriction to a certain variety of meaning. In this
tendency, as well as in the form of its sign, it appears related with
the class of distinctly defined meaning which is next to be taken up —
the passive, with yá
-sign. Though very far from being as widely used
as the latter beside other present-systems, it is in some cases an
intransitive conjugation by the side of a transitive of some other
class.
Irregularities of the ya
-class.
763. The roots of this class ending in am
lengthen their vowel in
forming the present-stem: they are klam, tam, dam, bhram, śam
be
quiet, śram
: for example, tā́myati, śrā́myati
. From kṣam
, however,
only kṣamyate
occurs; and śam
labor makes śamyati
(B.).
764. The root mad
has the same lengthening: thus, mā́dyati
.
765. The roots in īv
— namely, dīv, sīv, srīv
or śrīv
, and
ṣṭhīv
(from which no forms of this class are quotable) — are written
by the grammarians with iv
, and a similar lengthening in the
present-system is prescribed for them.
a. They appear to be properly dīū
etc., since their vocalized final
in other forms is always ū
; dīv
is by this proved to have nothing to
do with the assumed root div
shine, which changes to dyu
(361 d):
compare 240 b.
766. From the roots jṛ
and tṛ
(also written as jur
and tir
or
tur
) come the stems jī́rya
and tī́rya
, and jū́rya
and tūrya
(the
last two only in RV.); from pṛ
comes pū́rya
.
767. The root vyadh
is abbreviated to vidh
: thus, vídhyati
. And
any root which in other forms has a penultimate nasal loses it here:
thus, dṛ́hya
from dṛṅh
or dṛh
; bhraśya
from bhraṅś
or bhraś
;
rajya
from rañj
or raj
.
IX. Accented yá
-class: Passive conjugation.
768. A certain form of present-stem, inflected with middle endings, is
used only in a passive sense, and is formed from all roots for which
there is occasion to make a passive conjugation. Its sign is an accented
य yá
added to the root: thus, हन्य hanyá
from √ हन् han
slay,
आप्य āpyá
from √आप् āp
obtain, गृहय grhyá
from √गृह् gṛh
(or
grah
) seize: and so on, without any reference to the class according
to which the active and middle forms are made.
769. The form of the root to which the passive-sign is added is (since
the accent is on the sign) the weak one: thus, a penultimate nasal is
dropped, and any abbreviation which is made in the weak forms of the
perfect (794), in the aorist optative (922 b), or before ta
of the
passive participle (954), is made also in the passive present-system:
thus, ajyá
from √añj
, badhyá
from √bandh
, ucyá
from √vac
,
ijyá
from √yaj
.
770. On the other hand, a final vowel of a root is in general liable to
the same changes as in other parts of the verbal system where it is
followed by y
: thus —
a. Final i
and u
are lengthened: thus, mīyá
from √mi
; sūyá
from √su
;
b. Final ā
is usually changed to ī
: thus, dīyá
from √dā
; hīyá
from √hā
: but jñāyá
from √jñā
, and so khyāyá
, khāyá
, mnāyá
,
etc.;
c. Final ṛ
is in general changed to ri
: thus, kriyá
from √kṛ
;
but if preceded by two consonants (and also, it is claimed, in the root
ṛ
), it has instead the guṇa
-strengthening: thus, smaryá
from
√smṛ
(the only quotable case); — and in those roots which show a
change of ṛ
to ir
and ur
(so-called ṝ
-verbs: see 242), that
change is made here also, and the vowel is lengthened: thus, śīrya
from √śṛ
, pūryá
from √pṛ
.
771. The inflectiom of the passive-stem is precisely like that of the
other a
-stems; it differs only in accent from that of the class last
given. It may be here presented, therefore, in the same abbreviated
form:
a. Example of inflection: root kṛ
make; passive-stem क्रिय kriyá
:
1. Present Indicative.
s.
d.
p.
1
क्रिये
kriyé
क्रियावहे
kriyā́vahe
क्रियामहे
kriyā́mahe
etc.
etc.
etc.
2. Present Subjunctive.
b. The forms noticed as occurring in the older language are alone here instanced:
s.
d.
p.
1
kriyāí
kriyā́mahāi
2
kriyā́dhvāi
3
kriyā́te
kriyā́tāi
kriyā́ntāi
c. The 3d pl. ending antāi
is found once (ucyantāi
K.).
3. Present Optative.
1
क्रियेय
kriyéya
क्रियेवहि
kriyévahi
क्रियेमहि
kriyémahi
etc.
etc.
etc.
d. No forms of the passive optative chance to occur in RV. or AV.; they
are found, however, in the Brāhmaṇas. ChU. has once dhmāyīta
.
4. Present Imperative.
2
क्रियस्व
kriyásva
क्रियेथाम्
kriyéthām
क्रियध्वम्
kriyádhvam
etc.
etc.
etc.
5. Present Participle.
e. This is made with the suffix मान māna
: thus, क्रियमाण kriyámāṇa
.
f. In use, this participle is well distinguished from the other passive
participle by its distinctively present meaning: thus, kṛtá
done,
but kriyámāṇa
in process of doing, or being done.
6. Imperfect.
1
अक्रिये
ákriye
अक्रियावहि
ákriyāvahi
अक्रियामहि
ákriyāmahi
etc.
etc.
etc.
g. The passive-sign is never resolved into ia
in the Veda.
772. The roots tan
and khan
usually form their passives from
parallel roots in ā
: thus, tāyáte, khāyáte
(but also tanyate
, ``
khanyate
); and dham
, in like manner, makes either dhamyate
or
dhmāyáte
. The corresponding form to √jan
, namely jā́yate
(above,
761 b), is apparently a transfer to the preceding class.
773. By their form, mriyáte
dies, and dhriyáte
maintains itself,
is steadfast, are passives from the roots mṛ
die and dhṛ
hold;
although neither is used in a proper passive sense, and mṛ
is not
transitive except in the derivative form mṛṇ
(above, 731). With them
are to be compared the stems ā-driyá
heed and ā-priyá
be busy,
which are perhaps peculiar adaptations of meaning of passives from the
roots dṛ
pierce and pṛ
fill.
774. Examples of the transfer of stems from the yá-
or passive class
to the ya-
or intransitive class were given above (761 b); and it was
also pointed out that active instead of middle endings are occasionally,
even in the earlier language, assumed by forms properly passive:
examples are ā́ dhmāyati
and vy àpruṣyat
(śB.), bhūyati
(MāiU.). In
the epics, however (as a part of their general confusion of active and
middle forms: 529 a), active endings are by no means infrequently taken
by the passive: thus, śakyati, śrūyanti, bhriyantu, ijyant-
, etc.
The so-called Tenth or cur
-Class.
775. As was noticed above (607), the Hindu grammarians — and, after
their example, most European also — recognize yet another
conjugation-class, coördinate with those already described; its stems
show the class-sign áya
, added to a generally strengthened root (for
details as to the strengthening, see 1042). Though this is no proper
class, but a secondary or derivative conjugation (its stems are partly
of causative formation, partly denominative with altered accent), an
abbreviated example of its forms may, for the sake of accordance with
other grammars, be added here.
a. Example: root cint
think, meditate; stem cintáya
:
active.
middle.
Pres.
Indic.
cintáyāmi
cintáye
Subj.
cintáyāni
cintáyāi
Opt.
cintáyeyam
cintáyeya
Pple.
cintáyant
cintáyamāna
Impf.
ácintayam
ácintaye
b. The inflection, of course, is the same with that of other forms from
a
-stems (733 a).
c. The middle participle, in the later language, is more often made
with āna
instead of māna
: thus, cintayāna
: see 1043 f.
Uses of the Present and Imperfect.
776. The uses of the mode-forms of the present-system have been already briefly treated in the preceding chapter (572 ff.). The tense-uses of the two indicative tenses, present and imperfect, call here for only a word or two of explanation.
777. The present has, besides its strictly present use, the same subsidiary uses which belong in general to the tense: namely, the expression of habitual action, of future action, and of past action in lively narration.
a. Examples of future meaning are:
imáṁ céd vā́ imé cinváte táta evá no ‘bhíbhavanti
(śB.) verily if
these build this up, then they will straightway get the better of us;
agnir ātmabhavam prādād yatra vāñchati nāiṣadhaḥ
(MBh.) Agni gave his
own presence wherever the Nishadhan should desire;
svāgataṁ te ‘stu kiṁ karomi tava
(R.) welcome to thee; what shall I
do for thee?
b. Examples of past meaning are: úttarā sū́r ádharaḥ putrá āsīd dā́nuḥ
śaye sahávatsā ná dhenúḥ (RV.) the mother was over, the son under;
there Dānu lies, like a cow with her calf;
prahasanti ca tāṁ kecid abhyasūyanti cā ’pare akurvata dayāṁ kecit
(MBh.) some ridicule her, some revile her, some pitied her;
tato yasya vacanāt tatrā ’valambitās taṁ sarve tiraskurvanti
(H.)
thereupon they all fall to reproaching him by whose advice they had
alighted there.
778. In connection with certain particles, the present has rather more definitely the value of a past tense. Thus:
a. With purā́
formerly: thus,
saptarṣī́n u ha sma vāí purá rkṣā íty ā́cakṣate
(śB.) the seven sages,
namely, are of old called the bears;
tanmātram api cen mahyaṁ na dadāti purā bhavān
(MBh.) if you have
never before given me even an atom.
b. With the asseverative particle sma
: thus,
śrámeṇa ha sma vāí tád devā́ jayanti yád eṣāṁ jáyyam ā́sá rṣayaś ca
(śB.) in truth, both gods and sages were wont to win by penance what
was to be won; āviṣṭaḥ kalinā dyūte jīyate sma nalas tadā
(MBh.)
then Nala, being possessed by Kali, was beaten in play.
c. No example of this last construction is found in either RV. or AV.,
or elsewhere in the metrical parts of the Veda. In the Brāhmaṇas, only
habitual action is expressed by it. At all periods of the language, the
use of sma
with a verb as pure asseverative particle, with no effect
on the tense-meaning, is very common; and the examples later are hardly
to be distinguished from the present of lively narration — of which the
whole construction is doubtless a form.
779. The imperfect has remained unchanged in value through the whole history of the language; it is the tense of narration; it expresses simple past time, without any other implication.
a. Compare what is said later (end of chap. X. and chap. XI.) as to the value of the older past tenses, the perfect and aorist.
Notes[edit]
- ↑ Such statements of numbers, with regard to the various parts of the system of conjugation, are in all cases taken from the author’s Supplement to this grammar, entitled “Roots, Verb-Forms, and Primary Derivatives of the Sanskrit Language”, where lists of roots, and details as to forms etc., are also given.