SearchBrowseAboutContactDonate
Page Preview
Page 55
Loading...
Download File
Download File
Page Text
________________ 2. New past passive participle bases (Replacive -gga-, -dha- and a few others) Analogical replacement has been widely recognized as a basic moulding factor of MIA. morphology. Its role in forming certain MIA. finite verbal and participial bases has been clarified previously, in very broad outlines, by a few scholars in a number of regular or casual studies. (See the bihlographical note at the end). The present attempt is confined to the discussion of certain replacive types in MIA. past passive patriciple bases Besides -ia-, which has worked as a great leveller and has ultimately crowed out most of the rivals, we have replacive -kka-, -tta-ddha-, -ņņa-, -gga-, -dha- and a few other stray types. In the present attempt we shall consider replacive -gga-, -dha- and one or two other straggling formations. Relplacive -gga Analogically developed MIA. bases *ummagga-, ragga*vagga-(1), *hagga - and *pugga- have been noted and explained by Turner. To these are to be added *vagga-(2), *bhigga-, rigga-, *cugga, *pugga-, bhugga-, *rugga-(1), lugga- and *rugga-(2). Of the seventy-odd Sanskrit past passive participles formed with -na-, six are such as have a g-ending root-form before this -na. Their MIA, forms end in -gga-. They are as under : bhagna- 'broken' : bhaggamagna- 'immersed': maggalagna - stuck': laggaudvigna-“sorrowful' : uvvigga(samvigna-'agitated': samvigga-) bhugna-'bent' : bhuggarugņa-‘sick’: rugga- (variant: lugga-) Jain Education International For Private & Personal Use Only www.jainelibrary.org
SR No.001575
Book TitleSome Topics in the Development of OIA MIA NIA
Original Sutra AuthorN/A
AuthorH C Bhayani
PublisherL D Indology Ahmedabad
Publication Year1997
Total Pages154
LanguageEnglish
ClassificationBook_English, Language, & Grammar
File Size7 MB
Copyright © Jain Education International. All rights reserved. | Privacy Policy