A Sanskrit Grammar : Including Both the Classical Language, And the Older Dialects, of Veda And Brahmana

Cover A Sanskrit Grammar : Including Both the Classical Language, And the Older Dialects, of Veda And Brahmana
A Sanskrit Grammar : Including Both the Classical Language, And the Older Dialects, of Veda And Brahmana
William Dwight Whitney
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Words are thug used prepoeitioDally along with all the noon-cases excepting ihe^ dative. But in general their office is direc- tive only, determining more definitely, or strengthening, the proper case-use of the noun. Sometimes, however, the case-use is not easy to trace, and the noun then seems to be more immediately **govenied" by the preposition — that is, to have its case-form more arbitrarily determined by i£s association with the latter. This is ofteneat true of the accusative; and also o...f the genitive, which has, here as elae- where (294 b), suffered an extension of its normal sphere of use.
1126. a. The adverbs by derivative form (1097 ff.) have least of a prepositional value (exceptions are especially a few made with the suffix tae: 1098).
b. Most of the verbal prefixes (exceptions areud* ni, par&, pra; and ava and vi are almost such) have their prepositional or quasi- prepositional uses with cases; but much more widely in the older time than in the later: in the classical language the usage is mainly restricted to prati» ana and &.


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