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Guide
Lesson 2: Forming Simple Words
INTRODUCTION
Through Lesson 1, we have studied the letters of the
Sanskrit alphabet. Now, we will make simple words by spelling them using Devanagari letters first. After developing some examples,
we will take written words and then, transliterate them to Roman. Before
beginning, we will look at words at Braja Bhasa, Hindi, and Sanskrit, although the pronunciation and
spelling emphasis is on Sanskrit style.
Why Sanskrit though? The reason is quite
interesting. Unlike Braja Bhasa,
Hindi, and all other languages in
SPELLING
WORDS USING THE DEVANAGARI ALPHABET
Lets look at the first word of the day:
EXAMPLE
1: tava (yours [Sanskrit]).
STEP 1:
Break the word down through its syllables.
Tava can be broken down
to ta and va.
STEP 2:
Find the letters of the word and put them sequential order.
Recall the letters for ta
and va on the Devanagari
alphabet. Since ta comes firstm
place the ta first. The next letter is va. Place that after ta. Thus,
you get the word tava. Figure 2.1 demonstrates this
concept.
Figure 2.1
Lets use this technique with some more words.
EXAMPLE 2: khabara (news [Hindi/Bengali])
Again, this process is quite straightforward.
STEP 1: Break the word down through its syllables.
Khabara can be broken down into three syllables: kha ba and ra.
STEP 2: Find the letters of the word and put them
sequential order.
Recall the
letters for kha, ba and
ra on the Devanagari
alphabet.
Since kha comes first, place the kha
first.
The next letter
in line is ba. Place the ba
after the kha. So far, we got khaba.
The last letter
is ra. Place the ra
after the ba in khaba.
You get khabara. Figure 2.2 demonstrates this
concept.
Figure 2.2
Lets try one more spelling example.
EXAMPLE
3: daśaratha (King Daśaratha:
Lord Rāmas father [Sanskrit])
Same steps as before.
STEP 1:
Break the word down through its syllables.
Daśaratha
can be broken down to four syllables. The four syllables are da, śa, ra, and tha.
STEP 2:
Find the letters of the word and put them sequential order.
Recall the letters for da,
śa,
ra, and tha on the Devanagari alphabet.
Since da comes first,
place the da first.
The next letter in line is śa.
Place the śa after the da.
So far, we got daśa.
The third letter in line is ra.
Please the ra after the śa
in daśa. So far, we
got daśara.
The last letter is tha.
Place the tha after the ra
in daśara. You get daśaratha.
Figure 2.3 demonstrates this concept.
Figure 2.3
TRANSLITERATING
WORDS IN DEVANAGARI
Reading Devanagari words
and transliterating them in order to read them is just as important as spelling
them. The process of going about that is very similar to that of spelling the
words.
STEP ONE: Break all letters down. Each letter is one syllable long.
STEP TWO: Identify the letters in order
STEP THREE: Convert them into the transliteration
scheme and say the word.
Lets look at a nice short word.
EXAMPLE 1:
Figure 2.4
Lets apply the steps:
STEP ONE:
Break all letters down. Each letter is one syllable long.
This is done in Figure 2.5
Figure 2.5
STEP TWO:
Identify the letters in order
Figure 2.6
Clearly, this is two letters long. It is separated
into two letters in Figure 2.6
STEP
THREE: Convert them into the transliteration scheme and say the word.
Very obvious that pa + da
= pada. In Sanskrit, this either means foot/step
or devotional song.
Lets try a harder example.
EXAMPLE 2:
Figure 2.7
Again, the steps are applied.
STEP ONE:
Break all letters down. Each letter is one syllable long.
Figure 2.8
STEP TWO:
Identify the letters in order
Figure 2.9
This is a three chained letter. Referring to the
alphabet, here are the three letters.
STEP
THREE: Convert them into the transliteration scheme and say the word.
Add them up: bha + ja + na = bhajana.
(devotional song [Sans.]). Thats what KKSongs.org is
all about!
PRACTICE:
Try spelling these words using Devanagari
Script:
1.
2. nagara
(town in Hindi)
3. lava (Lava: Lord Rāmas son: Sanskrit)
4. daraśana
(vision in poetic Braja Bhasa)
Try reading the words from the Devanagari
script.
1.
2.
3.
4.
UPDATED: June 16, 2009