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________________ JULY, 1909.] Note.. The developments marked are only rare in those languages, and found only in one instance. Continuants, Stops. Pr. Drav. yā, nâ, nâ (Tamil.) úa, úê (Malayalam.) â, nâ, nê (Canarese.) ya, na, nê (Tuļu.) ē, nê, nâ (Telugu.) 1 yan, n'an, nân (I) 2 |yām, năm, nâm ( we ) 3 a'an, nan (rope) 11 (1) voiceless (2) voiced (1) voiceless A PRIMER OF DRAVIDIAN PHONOLOGY. 4 n'ayira, nayiru (sun) 5 naru (young plant) 6 n'aludal, n'âludal (hang). Tamil. L(2) voiced Nasals Liquids Semi-vowels ... *** ... Lip. P b W m Mal, n'an n'âm 品。 Teeth. t d n'an n'âyiru n'aru naru n'aluya, n'élu- nêlu... yu. ... www r in, nina âm, niva nēņu Dêsara Section II. I.-System of consonants. (1) The Primitive Dravidian parent-language had the following system of consonants:— Roof. T Can. B 1 F ... .... Tula. Toluga. yanu nama rêņu ...nesuru nêdzi nêlu ... Front. F g ēnu, nēna. ēmu, memu. nâru. 193 ****** Back. k g Note.-Stops are consonants which are formed by complete closure of the mouth passage, and may be pronounced with or without voice, i. e., with or without the vocal cords being set in action; in the former case they are said to be voiced; and in the latter voiceless. In the case of the continuants the closure of the mouth passage is only partial and not complete. These are also either voiced or voiceless."
SR No.032530
Book TitleIndian Antiquary Vol 38
Original Sutra AuthorN/A
AuthorRichard Carnac Temple
PublisherSwati Publications
Publication Year1984
Total Pages362
LanguageEnglish
ClassificationBook_English
File Size35 MB
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