AN INTRODUCTION TO THE GRAMMAR OF THE TIBETAN LANGUAGE

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Item Code: IDD576
Author: SARAT CHANDRA DAS
Publisher: Motilal Banarsidass Publishers Pvt. Ltd.
Language: English
Edition: 1996
ISBN: 812081211X
Pages: 272
Cover: Hardcover
Other Details 11.1" X 8.6"
Book Description
About the Book:

The present work is designed not only to help the general reader to grasp the grammatical structure of the Tibetan language in his endeavour to study the general literature of Tibet but also the Buddhist scholar who is particularly interested in the vast Tibetan literature which includes almost all the Buddhist works of India. It will prove equally useful for a Sanskrit student who will discover herein a key to unlock the immense volumes - faithful translations of the Sanskrit texts - which exist in Tibetan language on the manners, customs, opinions, knowledge, ignorance, superstitions, hopes and fears of the great part of Asia, especially, India in former days.

The work contains all the requisites of an elementary grammar. It undertakes to analyse and classify the grammatical forms of the Tibetan language. It recounts all the parts of Speech, the Declension and Conjugation systems, Pronunciation, Syntax and Prosody. As exercises in grammatical rules it contains specimens of composition from the standard works, particularly the extracts from the text of Situ Sum-Tag, the exhaustive commentary on Thonmi Sam Bhota's Sum-Chu-pa, Tag-jug-pa, Dag-je-Salwai Melong and others. In this work the author has followed the monumental work of Alexander Csoma de Koros, supplementing it here and there with materials drawn from Situ-Sum-Tag, the exhaustive commentary on Thonmi Sam Bhota's Sum-Chu-pa and Tag-jug-pa.

CONTENTS

Preface
Author's Introduction to SITU-SUM-TAG
Sum-chu-pa
Tag-jug-pa
Hints on the use of certain Diacritical marks
Some Hints to Readers
Indian Cycle of 60 years as Tibetanized
Chinese Cycle of 60 Years
Symbolic names for certain numbers
Method of Transliteration of Tibetan into English
Conventional method of representing Tibetan and Sanskrit letters
On the use of honorific terms and expressions
Introduction to the Grammar of the Tibetan Language (ORTHOGRAPHY)
Pronunciaion (ORTHOEPY)
On the use of the additive particles (see the corrigenda)
Reduplication of terminal letters
Article and Noun (ETYMOLOGY)
Plural number
Gender
Case
Pronoun
Declension of Personal Pronouns, &c.
Adjective
Numeral Adjectives
Verb
Conjugation
Participles
Adverbs
Prepositions
Conjunction
Interjection
Syntax
Prosody

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