Sanskrit verbs explained

Sanskrit has inherited from its parent, the Proto-Indo-European language, an elaborate system of verbal morphology, much of which has been preserved in Sanskrit as a whole, unlike in other kindred languages, such as Ancient Greek or Latin. Sanskrit verbs thus have an inflection system for different combinations of tense, aspect, mood, voice, number, and person. Non-finite forms such as participles are also extensively used.[1] [2]

Some of the features of the verbal system, however, have been lost in the classical language, compared to the older Vedic Sanskrit, and in other cases, distinctions that have existed between different tenses have been blurred in the later language. Classical Sanskrit thus does not have the subjunctive or the injunctive mood, has dropped a variety of infinitive forms, and the distinctions in meaning between the imperfect, perfect and aorist forms are barely maintained and ultimately lost.[3] [4]

Basics

Verb conjugation in Sanskrit involves the interplay of five 'dimensions', number, person, voice, mood and tense, with the following variables:[5]

1 3 numbers singular, dual, plural
2 3 persons first, second, third
3 3 voices active, middle, passive
4 4 moods indicative, optative, imperative, conditional
5 6 tenses present, imperfect, perfect, aorist, periphrastic future, simple future

Further, participles are considered part of the verbal systems although they are not verbs themselves, and as with other Sanskrit nouns, they can be declined across seven or eight cases, for three genders and three numbers.[6]

Classical Sanskrit has only one infinitive, of accusative case-form.[7]

Building blocks

Roots

The starting point for the morphological analysis of the Sanskrit verb is the root. It is conventionally indicated using the mathematical symbol √; for instance, "√bhū-" means the root "bhū-".

There are about 2000 roots enumerated by the ancient grammarians, of which less than half are attested in actual use. Allowing for sorting reduplication and other anomalies, there remain somewhat over 800 roots that form the practical basis of the verbal system, as well as the larger part of the inherited nominal stems of the language.

Compared to kindred Indo-European languages, Sanskrit is more readily analysable in its morphological structure, and its roots are more easily separable from accretionary elements.[8]

Stems and stem formation

Before the final endings — to denote number, person etc can be applied, additional elements may be added to the root. Whether such elements are affixed or not, the resulting component here is the stem, to which these final endings can then be added.[9] [10]

\underbrace{\underbrace{root+suffix

}_ + \mathrm}_

The following types of treatment are possible on the root to form the stem:

No Treatment

The personal endings are directly affixed to the root with no prior modification, subject to any internal sandhi rules in the process. With a few exceptions, the root keeps the accent and guṇa grade in the three persons of the active, while elsewhere the termination takes on the accent and the root grade is weakened.

There are around 130 roots in Sanskrit that come under this class. Sanskrit is unique among the ancient Indo-European languages to have largely preserved this system, which has largely died out in the others. Since adding endings to the root is complicated by phonological changes, the tendency right from the Proto-Indo-European stage has been to use thematic processes instead.[11]

Suffixion

A theme vowel is suffixed before any personal endings are added. In Sanskrit, this is -a-, inherited from Proto-Indo-European *-o- and *-e-. The addition of the theme vowel serves to avoid complications due to internal sandhi; the large majority of the verbs in the language are thematic.

Sanskrit also inherits other suffixes from Proto-Indo-European: -ya-, -ó- / -nó-, -nā-, and -aya-. Of these the first and the last include the thematic vowel while the others are athematic.[11]

Infixion

Another treatment also from Proto-Indo-European is inserting an exponent within the root itself. All roots undergoing this treatment end in consonants. In weak forms, the infix is simply a nasal (n, ñ, , ), while in strong forms this expands to -ná- and bears the accent.[12]

Accent and gradation

During conjugation, the accent might fall either on the root vowel or on the ending. Among thematic verbs, some roots always get the accent, accompanied by a strengthening of the grade to guṇa or vṛddhi, while in others it always falls on the ending. In non-thematic cases, the position of the accent varies.

The general rule for variable-accent verbs is that in the indicative the stem has the accent and the guṇa grade in the three persons of the singular active, and that in the dual and plural of the active and the whole of the middle, the accent falls on the ending and the stem is in its weak form.[13]

Reduplication

The root might be subject to reduplication, wherein a part of it is prefixed to itself in the process of forming the stem. For roots beginning in a consonant, that initial consonant, or a modified form of it, is taken, while for those beginning in a vowel, it's the very vowel.

The potential modifications that might be made to the prefix consonant can be seen in some typical examples below:[14]

Reduplication patterns
Root Reduplication Remarks
√pracch- pa·pracch- Standard
√budh- bu·budh- " "
√śru- śu·śru- " "
√dhā- da·dhā- aspirate -> non-aspirate
√kṛ- ca-kṛ guttural -> palatal
√khid- ci·khid- " "
√grabh- ja·grabh-" "
√hṛ- ja·hṛ- " "
√stṛ- ta·stṛ- second consonant in a cluster
√sthā- ta·sthā- " "
√skand- ca·skand-a combination of above rules

Augment

Roots are prefixed with an á- (from PIE é-) in preterite formations (imperfect, aorist, pluperfect, conditional). The augment without exception bears the accent in these forms. When the root starts with any of the vowels i-, u- or , the vowel is subject to vṛddhi and not guṇa.[15] [16]

Voice

Sanskrit has in the present inherited two sets of personal endings from its parent Proto-Indo-European, one for the active voice and another for the middle voice. Verbs can be conjugated in either voice, although some verbs only show one or the other.[17]

Originally the active voice suggested action carried out for someone else and the middle voice meant action carried out for oneself. By the time of Classical Sanskrit, and especially in later literature, this distinction blurred and in many cases eventually disappeared.[18] [19] [20]

Personal endings

Conjugational endings in Sanskrit convey person, number, and voice. Different forms of the endings are used depending on what tense stem and mood they are attached to. Verb stems or the endings themselves may be changed or obscured by sandhi. The theoretical forms of the endings are as follow:[21] [22]

ActiveMiddle
PersonSingular Dual Plural Singular Dual Plural
Primary1-mi -vás -más -váhe -máhe
2-si -thás -thá -sé -ā́the -dhvé
3-ti -tás -ánti, -áti -té -ā́te -ánte, -áte
Secondary1-am -vá -má -í, -á -váhi -máhi
2-s -tám -tá -thā́s-ā́thām -dhvám
3-t -tā́m -án, -ús -tá -ā́tām -ánta, -áta, -rán
Perfect1-a -vá -má -váhe -máhe
2-tha -áthus -sé -ā́the -dhvé
3-a -átus -ús -ā́te -ré
Imperative1-āni -āva -āma -āi -āvahāi -āmahāi
2-dhí, -hí,—-tám -tá -svá -ā́thām -dhvám
3-tu -tā́m -ántu, -átu -tā́m -ā́tām -ántām, -átām

Primary endings are used with present indicative and future forms. Secondary endings are used with the imperfect, conditional, aorist, and optative. Perfect and imperative endings are used with the perfect and imperative respectively.

Verb classes

Based on the treatment they undergo to form the stem, the roots of the Sanskrit language are arranged by the ancient grammarians in ten classes or gaṇas, based on how they form the present stem, and named after a verb typical to each class.

No discoverable grammatical principle has been found for the ordering of these classes. This can be rearranged for greater clarity into non-thematic and thematic groups as summarized below:[11] [23] [24]

Thematic verb classes
Root Treatment Stem gaṇa Conjugation samples Remarks
√bhū- Root accent, gunated bháv- First bháv·a·ti The commonest of all classes, with nearly half of the roots in the language.[25]
√tud- None (ending accent) tud- Sixth tud·á·ti
√dív- -ya- suffix dī́v·ya- Fourth dī́v·ya·ti
√cur--aya- with root gradation, or -áya- without cór·aya- Tenth cór·aya·ti Usually to form causatives, not strictly a class per se[26]
Athematic verb classes
Root Treatment Stem gaṇa Conjugation samples Remarks
√ad-None ad- Second at·ti
at·tas
ad·anti
√hu-Reduplication, accent varies juhó-
juhu-
júhv-
Third juhó·ti
juhu·tás
júhv·ati
√su--no- suffix su·nó-
su·nu-
su·nv-
Fifth su·nó·ti
su·nu·tás
su·nv·ánti
√tan--o- suffix tan·ó-
tan·u-
tan·v-
Eighth tan·ó·ti
tan·u·tás
tan·v·ánti
√krī--nā- suffix krī·ṇā́-
krī·ṇī-
krī·ṇ-
Ninth krī·ṇā́·ti
krī·ṇī·tás
krī·ṇ-ánti
√rudh-Nasal infix ru·ṇá·dh-
ru·n·dh-
Seventh ru·ṇá·d·dhi
ru·n·d·dhás
ru·n·dh·ánti

Seṭ and aniṭ roots

Sanskrit roots may also be classified, independent of their , into three groups, depending on whether they take the vowel before certain tense markers. Since the term used for this vowel by Sanskrit grammarians is , these two groups are called (with ), (optional ), and (without ) respectively.[27] [28] [29]

The i sound in question is a phoneme i that appears in certain morphological circumstances for certain, lexically defined roots, regularly continuing Proto-Indo-European (PIE) laryngeals, as in > bháv·i·tum. Note that the PIE laryngeal (represented by an here) was a part of the PIE root; it occurs in all of its allomorphs, for example > bhū·tá·s (is reduced to in PIE due to ablaut; the laryngeal disappears in this context, leaving its trace in the length of ū in Sanskrit). In Classical Sanskrit, the scope of this i was broadened by analogous change.

In the Aṣṭādhyāyī the synchronic analysis of the phenomenon is somewhat different: the i sound is treated as an augment of the suffix that follows the root. Rule 7.2.35 states that i should be prepended to ārdhadhātuka suffixes beginning with a consonant other than y; an example of such suffix is -tum (the Classical Sanskrit infinitive).

An example of differences between the two classes is the aorist-marker. While some of the aniṭ-roots form aorist with the -s suffix, seṭ-roots are suffixed by -iṣ.

Following this terminology, PIE roots ending in laryngeals are also called seṭ-roots, and all others aniṭ-roots.[27] [28]

Conjugation

Scope

As in kindred Indo-European languages, conjugation is effected using the above building blocks across the tenses, moods, voices, persons and numbers, yielding, in Sanskrit, a huge number of combinations.

Where the forms take personal endings, in other words when it complements a subject, these are called finite forms. Sanskrit also has a few subjectless, i.e., non-finite forms. In the standard scenario, the following forms are seen in Classical Sanskrit:[30] [31]

Conjugation – standard finite verbs[32]
System Tense Mood Endings Conventional term
Present Present Indicative Primary 'Present'
Optative Secondary 'Optative'
Imperative Imperative 'Imperative'
Imperfect Indicative Secondary 'Imperfect'
Perfect Perfect Indicative Perfect 'Perfect'
Aorist Aorist Indicative Secondary 'Aorist'
Precative Optative Secondary 'Precative'
Future Future Indicative Primary 'Future'
Conditional Secondary 'Conditional'
Periphrastic Indicative Secondary 'Periphrastic'

Furthermore, Sanskrit has so-called Secondary conjugations:[33]

The non-finite forms are:

Principal parts

It is difficult to generalize how many principal parts a Sanskrit verb possesses, since different verb form categories are used with different degrees of regularity. For the vast majority of verbs, conjugation can be made sufficiently clear with the first five of the following forms supplied:[34] [35] [36]

Principal parts
Part √bhū- √kṛ-
Present bháv·a·ti kar·ó·ti
kur·u·tás
Past participle bhū·tá kṛ·tá
Infinitive bháv·i·tum kár·tum
Perfect babhū́·va cakā́r·a
Aorist á·bhū·t á·kār·ṣ·īt

Present system

The present system includes the present tense, the imperfect, and the optative and imperative moods, as well as some of the remnant forms of the old subjunctive.

Thematic classes

All thematic classes have invariant stems and share the same inflectional endings. To demonstrate, observe the conjugation of the Cl. 1 verb √bhū- bháv-.[37] Note that this root is gunated and holds the stress within the root syllable.[38]

Present

The present indicative takes primary endings.[39] [40]

Active Middle
Singular DualPlural Singular DualPlural
1stbháv·ā·mi bháv·ā·vasbháv·ā·masbháv·ebháv·ā·vahebháv·ā·mahe
2ndbháv·a·sibháv·a·thasbháv·a·thabháv·a·sebháv·ethebháv·a·dhve
3rdbháv·a·tibháv·a·tasbháv·antibháv·a·tebháv·etebháv·ante

Imperfect

The imperfect takes the augment and secondary endings. The augment always bears the accent with no exceptions.[41] [42]

Active Middle
Singular Dual Plural Singular Dual Plural
1stá·bhav·a·má·bhav·ā.vaá·bhav·ā·maá·bhav·e á·bhav·ā·vahiá·bhav·ā·mahi
2ndá·bhav·a·sá·bhav·a·tamá·bhav·a·taá·bhav·a·thāsá·bhav·ēthāmá·bhav·a·dhvam
3rdá·bhav·a·tá·bhav·a·tāmá·bhav·an á·bhav·a·ta á·bhav·ētāmá·bhav·anta

Optative

The present optative takes the suffix -e and athematic secondary endings.[43] [44]

Active Middle
Singular Dual Plural Singular Dual Plural
1stbháv·e·y·ambháv·e·vabháv·e·ma bháv·e·ya bháv·e·vahibháv·e·mahi
2ndbháv·e·sbháv·e·tambháv·e·tabháv·e·thāsbháv·e·y·āthāmbháv·e·dhvam
3rdbháv·e·tbháv·e·tāmbháv·e·y·usbháv·e·tabháv·e·y·ātāmbháv·e·ran

Imperative

The imperative has its own set of special endings. Some of these forms are relics from an original subjunctive.

Active Middle
Singular Dual Plural Singular Dual Plural
1stbháv·ānibháv·āvabháv·āmabháv·aibháv·āvahaibháv·āmahai
2ndbháv·abháv·a·tambháv·a·tabhav·a·svabháv·ethāmbháv·a·dhvam
3rdbháv·a·tubháv·a·tāmbháv·a·ntubháv·a·tāmbháv·e·tāmbháv·a·ntām

Athematic classes

Present

The present indicative used the strong stem in the singular and the weak elsewhere. For √kṛ- used as example here, the weak stem final -u- is sometimes omitted before endings in -v- and -m-.

The alternate forms for class 3 (reduplicating class) are shown with hu-.

Active Middle
Singular Dual Plural Singular Dual Plural
1stkar·ó·mi kur·vás kur·más kur·vé kur·váhe kur·máhe
2ndkar·ó·ṣi kur·u·thás kur·u·thá kur·u·ṣé kur·v·ā́the kur·u·dhvé
3rdkar·ó·ti kur·u·tás kur·v·ánti/juhv·áti kur·u·té kur·v·ā́te kur·v·áte

Imperfect

The imperfect uses the two stems in the same way as the present.

Active Middle
Singular Dual Plural Singular Dual Plural
1stá·kar·ava·m á·kur·va á·kur·ma á·kur·vi á·kur·vahi á·kur·mahi
2ndá·kar·o·s á·kur·u·tam á·kur·u·ta á·kur·u·thās á·kurv·āthām á·kur·u·dhvam
3rdá·kar·o·t á·kur·u·tām á·kur·v·an/á·juh·av·us á·kur·u·ta á·kur·v·ātām á·kur·v·ata

Optative

The optative takes the suffix -yā́- in the active, and -ī- in the middle; the stem in front of them is always the weak one. Here the final -u- of the kuru- stem is again irregularly dropped.

Active Middle
Singular Dual Plural Singular Dual Plural
1stkur·yā́·m kur·yā́·va kur·yā́·ma kurv·ī·yá kurv·ī·váhi kurv·ī·máhi
2ndkur·yā́·s kur·yā́·tam kur·yā́·ta kurv·ī·thā́s kurv·ī·yā́thām kurv·ī·dhvám
3rdkur·yā́·t kur·yā́·tām kur·yús kurv·ī·tá kurv·ī·yā́tām kurv·ī·rán

Imperative

The imperative uses the strong stem in all of the 1st person forms, as well as the 3rd person singular active.

The 2nd person active may have no ending (class 5, class 8), -dhi (most of class 3,7, as well as class 1 ending in consonants), or -hi (class 9, class 3 in ā, and class 1 in vowels; these classes usually ended in laryngeals in Proto-Indo-European).

Active Middle
Singular Dual Plural Singular Dual Plural
1stkar·áv·āni kar·áv·āva kar·áv·āma kar·áv·ai kar·áv·āvahai kar·áv·āmahai
2ndkur·ú/juhú·dhi/krīṇī́·hi kur·u·tám kur·u·tá kur·u·ṣvá kur·v·ā́thām kur·u·dhvám
3rdkar·ó·tu kur·u·tā́m kur·v·ántu/juhv·átu kur·u·tā́m kur·v·ā́tām kur·v·átām

Perfect system

The perfect system includes only the perfect. The stem is formed with reduplication; the reduplicated vowel is usually a, but u or i for verbs containing them.

This system also produces separate "strong" and "weak" forms of the verb — the strong guṇa form is used with the singular active, and the weak zero-grade form with the rest. In some verbs, the 3rd and optionally 1st person are further strengthened until the root syllable becomes heavy.

Most verbs ending in consonants behave as seṭ in the perfect tense in front of consonant endings. √kṛ- shown here is one of the exceptions.

Active Middle
Singular Dual Plural Singular Dual Plural
1stcakā́r·a cakṛ·vá cakṛ·má cakr·é cakṛ·váhe cakṛ·máhe
2ndcakár·tha cakr·áthus cakr·á cakṛ·sé cakr·ā́the cakṛ·dhvé
3rdcakā́r·a cakr·atús cakr·ús cakr·é cakr·ā́te cakri·ré

Aorist system

The aorist system includes aorist proper (with past indicative meaning, e.g. abhūḥ 'you were') and some of the forms of the ancient injunctive (used almost exclusively with in prohibitions, e.g. mā bhūḥ 'don't be'). The principle distinction of the two is the presence/absence of an augment – á- prefixed to the stem.

The aorist system stem actually has three different formations: the simple aorist, the reduplicating aorist (semantically related to the causative verb), and the sibilant aorist.

Root aorist

This aorist is formed by directly adding the athematic secondary endings to the root. Originally this type also had different strong and weak stems for the singular and plural, but verbs that both allow this distinction and utilize this type of aorist are exceptionally rare.

From √gam- and √dā- ; the latter takes -us in the 3rd person plural.

Regular stem ā-stem
Singular Dual Plural Singular Dual Plural
1stá·gam·am á·gan·va á·gan·ma á·dā·m á·dā·va á·dā·ma
2ndá·gan á·gan·tam á·gan·taá·dā·s á·dā·tam á·dā·ta
3rdá·gan á·gan·tām á·gm·aná·dā·t á·dā·tām á·d·us

Known instances of weak stems from the Veda include avṛjan from √vṛj- in the plural active, adhithās from √dhā- in the singular middle, and various forms from √kṛ- . Middle voice forms of this class are almost nonexistent in the classical period, being suppleted by those of the sibilant classes.

a-root aorist

This class is formed with a thematized zero-grade root, and takes regular thematic endings.

From √sic- :

Active Middle
Singular Dual Plural Singular Dual Plural
1stá·sic·a·m á·sic·ā·va á·sic·ā·ma á·sic·e á·sic·ā·vahi á·sic·ā·mahi
2ndá·sic·a·s á·sic·a·tam á·sic·a·ta á·sic·a·thās á·sic·ethām á·sic·a·dhvam
3rdá́·sic·a·t á·sic·a·tām á·sic·an á·sic·a·ta á·sic·etām á·sic·anta

s-aorist

This is the most productive aorist class for regular aniṭ verbs, made by suffixing s to the root. All active voice forms use the vṛddhi grade, and middle forms use the weakest grade that produces a heavy root syllable; √kṛ- and some verbs in ā may irregularly use zero grade in place of the latter.

From √ji- :

Active Middle
Singular Dual Plural Singular Dual Plural
1stá·jai·ṣ·am á·jai·ṣ·va á·jai·ṣ·ma á·je·ṣ·i á·je·ṣ·vahi á·je·ṣ·mahi
2ndá·jai·ṣ·īs á·jai·ṣ·ṭam á·jai·ṣ·ṭa á·je·ṣ·ṭhās á·je·ṣ·āthām á·je·ḍhvam
3rdá·jai·ṣ·īt á·jai·ṣ·ṭām á·jai·ṣ·us á·je·ṣ·ṭa á·je·ṣ·ātām á·je·ṣ·ata

From √tud- :

Active Middle
Singular Dual Plural Singular Dual Plural
1stá·taut·s·am á·taut·s·va á·taut·s·ma á·tut·s·i á·tut·s·vahi á·tut·s·mahi
2ndá·taut·s·īs á·taut·tam á·taut·ta á·tut·thās á·tut·s·āthām á·tud·dhvam
3rdá·taut·s·īt á·taut·tām á·taut·s·uḥ á·tut·ta á·tut·s·ātām á·tut·s·ata

is-aorist

This aorist form contains the suffix -iṣ- and is the productive form of regular seṭ verbs. The strong active stem is usually strengthened until the root syllable is heavy, and the weak middle stem usually assumes the guṇa grade. Some verbs in a followed by a single consonant, such as grah-, do not take additional strengthening in the active.

From √pū- :

Active Middle
Singular Dual Plural Singular Dual Plural
1stá·pāv·iṣ·am á·pāv·iṣ·va á·pāv·iṣ·ma á·pav·iṣ·i á·pav·iṣ·vahi á·pav·iṣ·mahi
2ndá·pāv·īs á·pāv·iṣ·ṭam á·pāv·iṣ·ṭa á·pavi·ṣ·ṭhās á·pav·iṣ·āthām á·pav·i·ḍhvam
3rdá·pāv·īt á·pāv·iṣ·ṭām á·pāv·iṣ·us á·pav·iṣ·ṭa á·pav·iṣ·ātām á·pav·iṣ·ata

sis-aorist

This small class is characterized by a reduplicated -siṣ- suffix, and is only used in the active voice; the s-aorist is usually used in the middle by verbs that take this formation.

From √yā- :

Active
Singular Dual Plural
1stá·yā·siṣ·am á·yā·siṣ·va á·yā·siṣ·ma
2ndá·yā·s·īs á·yā·siṣ·ṭam á·yā·siṣ·ṭa
3rdá·yā·s·īt á·yā·siṣ·ṭām á·yā·siṣ·us

sa-aorist

This formation is used with a small number of verbs ending in consonants which can form the cluster kṣ when an -s- is added. It takes a mixture of thematic and athematic endings.

From √diś- :

Active Middle
Singular Dual Plural Singular Dual Plural
1stá·dik·ṣa·m á·dik·ṣā·va á·dik·ṣā·ma á·dik·ṣ·i á·dik·ṣā·vahi á·dik·ṣā·mahi
2ndá·dik·ṣa·s á·dik·ṣa·tam á·dik·ṣa·ta á·dik·ṣa·thās á·dik·ṣ·āthām á·dik·ṣa·dhvam
3rdá·dik·ṣa·t á·dik·ṣa·tām á·dik·ṣ·an á·dik·ṣa·ta á·dik·ṣ·ātām á·dik·ṣ·anta

Future system

Simple future

The simple future stem is formed with the suffix -sya- or -iṣya- and the guṇa grade of the root.

From √kṛ- :

Active Middle
Singular Dual Plural Singular Dual Plural
1stkar·iṣyā́·mi kar·iṣyā́·vas kar·iṣyā́·mas kar·iṣy·é kar·iṣyā́·vahe kar·iṣyā́·mahe
2ndkar·iṣyá·si kar·iṣyá·thas kar·iṣyá·tha kar·iṣyá·se kar·iṣy·éthe kar·iṣyá·dhve
3rdkar·iṣyá·ti kar·iṣyá·tas kar·iṣy·ánti kar·iṣyá·te kar·iṣy·éte kar·iṣy·ánte

Periphrastic future

The periphrastic future is formed by first deriving the agentive noun from the root using -tṛ, and attaching forms of the verb as- 'to be' as auxiliary, in the first and second persons. In the third person, the masculine form of the agentive noun stands in for all actors, masculine, feminine or neuter.

From √dā- :

Active
Singular Dual Plural
1stdā·tā́·smi dā·tā́·svas dā·tā́·smas
2nddā·tā́·si dā·tā́·sthas dā·tā́·stha
3rddā·tā́ dā·tā́rau dā·tā́ras

The medio-passive forms are hardly ever found in the literature.[45]

Conditional

There is also a conditional, formed from the future stem as the imperfect is formed from a thematic present stem. Rarely used in Classical Sanskrit, the conditional refers to hypothetical actions.

Active Middle
Singular Dual Plural Singular Dual Plural
1stá·kar·iṣya·m á·kar·iṣyā·va á·kar·iṣyā·ma á·kar·iṣy·e á·kar·iṣyā·vahi á·kar·iṣyā·mahi
2ndá·kar·iṣya·s á·kar·iṣya·tam á·kar·iṣya·ta á·kar·iṣya·thās á·kar·iṣy·ethām á·kar·iṣya·dhvam
3rdá·kar·iṣya·t á·kar·iṣya·tām á·kar·iṣya·n á·kar·iṣya·ta á·kar·iṣy·etām á·kar·iṣy·anta

Secondary Conjugation

Sanskrit verbs are capable of a second category of conjugation wherein the root takes on a modified or extended meaning. These are:[46] [47]

  1. Passive
  2. Intensive
  3. Causative
  4. Desiderative
  5. Denominative

Passive

The passive is very similar in formation to the dív-class (4th) already seen above, with the primary difference that the -yá- always bears the accent. The root is in its weak form, and the middle endings are used. From √han- :[48] [49]

Singular DualPlural
1sthan·y·éhan·yā́·vahehan·yā́·mahe
2ndhan·yá·sehan·y·éthehan·yá·dhve
3rdhan·yá·tehan·y·étehan·y·ánte

Intensive

The intensive is formed by reduplicating the root and is conjugated like a class-2 verb. Thus for √vid, we have véved-, vevid-:[50]

Singular DualPlural
1stvéved·mi, véved·ī·mivevid·vásvevid·más
2ndvévet·si, véved·ī·ṣivevit·thásvevit·thá
3rdvévet·ti, vévid·ī·tivevit·tasvévid·ati

Participles

Participles are verbal adjectives, a form of the non-finite verb. They are derived from verb roots, but behave like adjectives.[51]

Sanskrit inherits a highly developed system of participles from Proto-Indo-European preserving some of the more archaic features of the parent language.[52]

Such a participial element found in almost all Indo-European languages is -nt-. This can be seen in PIE *bheront-, from *bher- 'bear', Sanskrit bharan(t)-, Greek φέρον(τ)- (pheron(t)-), Latin feren(t)-, all meaning 'bearing, carrying'.

In Sanskrit, participles exist in all three voices — active, middle and passive, and in three of the tenses — present, perfect and future. While this should logically yield 3x3=9 forms, the actual number is usually higher, because potentially at least, there are three different future passive participles and two perfect active participles. In some cases it may be lower, because a verb lacks active or middle forms.[53] [54]

The different possible forms for a couple of representative verbs (√nī-, nayati 1 & √dhā-, dadhāti 3) can be seen below:

Active Middle Passive
Present: náy·ant- náy·a·māna- nī·yá·māna-
Perfect: ninī·vā́ṅs- niny·āná- nī·tá-
Future: ne·ṣy·ánt- ne·ṣyá·māṇa- ne·tavyá-
né·ya-
Active Middle Passive
Present: dadh·át- dadh·āná- dhī·yá·māna-
Perfect: dadhi·vā́ṅs- dadh·āná- hi·ta-
Future: dhā·sy·ánt- dhā·syá·māna- dhā·tavyá-
dhā·nī́ya
dhé·ya-

Past participles

Past participles are formed directly from verbal roots for most verbs in most cases (except for verbs of the tenth gaṇa, which form them from the present stem). They have a perfective sense, in that they refer to actions that are completed. They can freely substitute for finite verbs conjugated in the past sense.

Past passive participles

Sanskrit inherits two suffixes from Proto-Indo-European used to form verbal adjectives and the past passive participle: *-tó- and *-nó-. The first can be seen in the root 'to come' forming *gʷm̥-tó-, which in Sanskrit becomes gatá- '(having) gone', and in Latin .[55]

The second method is less frequent but can be seen in PIE 'to split' giving *bʰid-nó-, in Sanskrit bhin-ná- '(having been) split', cognate with English bitten.[56] [57] [58]

In Sanskrit thus the past passive participle is formed by adding "-tá-", or "-ná-", to a root in its weakest grade when weakening is applicable (e.g. samprasāraṇa). For seṭ roots, the augment i is inserted before the suffix. The resulting form is an adjective and modifies a noun either expressed or implied.

The past passive participle can usually be translated by the corresponding English past passive participle:

Examples
Root Stem Final form Glossary Remarks
√bhū- bhū- bhū·tá- been, having been [59]
√kṛ kṛ kṛ·tá- done, having done [60]
√vac- uk- uk·tá- spoken, said [61]
√vad- ud·i- ud·i·tá- spoken [62]
√pṝ- pūr- pūr·ṇá- filled, full [63] With irregular root modification

When used with transitive (sakarmaka) verbs, the standard passive meaning can be achieved; the agent, if used, is placed in the instrumental case:

Note that rākṣasa is the direct object (karman) of the verbal action expressed in √han "to kill" and the agent (kartṛ) of the same action, Rāma, occurs in the instrumental case.

When made from an intransitive (akarmaka) or neuter verb, the same participle has no passive, but an indefinite past sense:[64]

Past active participles

The past participle could be extended by adding the possessive suffix -vant-: kṛ·tá·vant- – 'one who has something (or things) done'.

This naturally takes on the function of the active past participle. This is a linguistic innovation within the Indo-Aryan branch, and the first purely participial formation of this character appears in the Atharvaveda.

Later on this formation (-tá·vant- or -ná·vant-) comes to be used independently, with the copula understood, in place of an active preterite:

Present participle

Unlike the past participles, the present participle is formed from the present stem of the verb, and is formed differently depending on whether the verb is parasmaipada or ātmanepada. The present participle can never substitute for a finite verb. It is also inherently imperfective, indicating an action that is still in process at the time of the main verb.

Present active participle

In theory, the present active participle is the addition of -ant to a form of the root. In practice however, this participle can simply be made by dropping the -i from the 3rd person plural in the present indicative. This gives us the masculine singular form of the participle. Thus,

The weak form is -at-

The feminine is formed as -antī́ in some roots, and as -atī́ in others.[66] [67]

Present middle participle

This participle is formed by adding -māna- to a thematic stem and -āná- to an athematic stem in the weak form.[68] [69] Thus for √bhū- and √kṛ-:

Future participles

Formed from the future stem just as the present participle is formed from the present stem, the future participle describes an action that has not yet happened, but that may in the future.

Future active participle

Just as in the present, it can be formed by simply dropping the -i of the third-person plural. Thus,

The feminines are in either -ántī or -atī́ although the latter is extremely rare.[70]

Future middle participle

Similarly, the middle form is obtained by adding -māna- to the future stem. So we have:

Gerundive

The gerundive is a future passive prescriptive participle, indicating that the word modified should or ought to be the object of the action of the participle.

This is made by affixing -ya-, -távya-/-tavyá-, -anī́ya- to different stem forms. Thus for √bhū- and √kṛ-:

The accent on -tavya- may fall on either syllable.[71] [72]

Perfect participle

The perfect participle is a past active participle, but is very rarely used in classical Sanskrit.

This is formed by adding -vā́ṅs in the active and -āná in the middle voice to the weak form of the perfect stem, as seen, for example in the third person active. The feminine forms are -uṣī́ and -ānā́. Thus,[73]

Aorist participle

The aorist participle used in Vedic was lost in Classical Sanskrit.

Other non-finite forms

Infinitive

The infinitive originates as the accusative form of an old verbal noun. The ending -tum, similar to the Latin supine,[74] [75] is added to the root which bears the accent with its vowel guṇated. An '-i-' intervenes just like in other conjugation forms as needed.[76]

Gerund

There exists a non-finite form in Sanskrit termed gerund or absolutive which is analysed differently from the gerund in other Proto-Indo-European languages.[77] It has the sense of 'having done' or whatever the verb may be.

It is formed using -tvā́ or -ya, with the former normally used on a bare root whereas the latter applied to verbs with prefixes added to the root.

The -tvā́ formation is similar to the past passive participle formed from -tá and correspondingly bears the accent. The second form can be normally derived by suffixing the root directly, with its vowel bearing the accent whilst in the weak form. A root ending in a short vowel gets an intervening -t-.[78] [79]

Comprehensive example

The following table is a partial listing of the major verbal forms that can be generated from a single root. Not all roots can take all forms; some roots are often confined to particular stems. The verbal forms listed here are all in the third person singular, and they can all be conjugated in three persons and three numbers.[80]

When there are two forms in one cell of this table, the first one is active, the second one middle.

Primary Causative Desiderative Intensive
Present stemPresentbháv·a·ti
bháv·a·te
bhāv·áya·ti
bhāv·áya·te
búbhū·ṣa·ti bóbho·ti / bóbhav·ī·ti
bobhū·yá·te
Imperfect á·bhav·a·t
á·bhav·a·ta
á·bhāv·aya·t
á·bhāv·aya·ta
á·bubhū·ṣa·t á·bobho.t
á·bobhū·yá·t
Imperative bháv·a·tu
bháv·a·tām
bhāv·áya·tu
bhāv·áya·tām
búbhū·ṣa·tu bóbho·tu / bóbhav·ī·tu
bobhū·yá·tām
Optative bháv·et
bháv·e·ta
bhāv·áye·t
bhāv·áye·ta
búbhū·ṣe·t bobhav·yā́t
bobhū·yé·ta
Present participlebháv·ant-
bháv·a·māna-
bhāv·áy·ant-
bhāv·áya·māna-
búbhū·ṣ·ant- bóbhav·ant-
bóbhū·ya·māna
PassivePresentbhū·yá·te bhāv·yá·te bubhū·ṣ·yá·te
Imperfectá·bhū·ya·ta á·bhāv·ya·ta á·bubhū·ṣ·ya·ta
Imperativebhū·yá·tām bhāv·yá·tām bubhū·ṣ·yá·tām
Optativebhū·yé·ta bhāv·yé·tabubhū·ṣ·yé·ta
Passive participlebhū·yá·māna- bhāv·yá·māna- bubhū·ṣ·yá·māna-
Future stemFuturebhav·iṣyá·ti bhāv·ay·iṣyá-ti
bhāv·ay·iṣyá·te
bubhū·ṣ·iṣyá·ti
Conditionalá·bhav·iṣya·t á·bhāv·ay·iṣya·t á·bubhū·ṣ·iṣya·t
Future participlebhav·iṣyá·nt- bhav·iṣyá·māna-
bhāv·ay·iṣyá·māna-
bubhū·ṣ·iṣyá·nt-
Periphrastic futurebhav·i·tá bhāv·ay·i·tá bubhū·ṣi·tā́
Perfectbabhū́v·a bhāv·áya·māsa bubhū́·ṣā-māsa
AoristAoristá·bhū·t
Benedictive / precativebhū·yā́·t
Injunctivemā bhūt
Past participlebhū·tá-
bhū·tá·vant-
bhāv·i·tá-
bhāv·i·tá·vant-
bubhū·ṣi·tá-
bubhū·ṣi·tá·vant-
Gerundivebháv·ya
bhav·i·távya / bhav·i·tavyá
bhāv·ayi·távya / bhāv·ayi·tavyá
Infinitivebháv·i·tum
Gerundbhū·tvā́, -bhū́·ya

Taking into account the fact that the participial forms each decline in seven cases in three numbers across three genders, and the fact that the verbs each conjugate in three persons in three numbers, the primary, causative, and desiderative stems for this root when counted together have over a thousand forms.

See also

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Fortson, §10.41.
  2. Whitney p. 200 ch. 8.
  3. Macdonnell, Vedic p.118.
  4. Fortson, §10.41.
  5. Bucknell, p. 34.
  6. Burrow, p. 367
  7. Whitney, §538
  8. Burrow, §7.1.
  9. Burrow, §7.3.
  10. Whitney, ch 8.
  11. Burrow, §7.8
  12. Whitney, §683
  13. Burrow, §7.5
  14. Whitney, §588–590.
  15. Burrow, §7.5.
  16. Whitney, §585.
  17. Burrow, §7.6
  18. Burrow, §7.6
  19. Macdonnell, ch. 4.
  20. Whitney, ch. 8, §528–531.
  21. Bucknell, p. 43.
  22. Whitney, §553
  23. Whitney, ch. 8.
  24. Monier Williams – word meanings
  25. Burrow, p. 328
  26. Whitney, §775
  27. Fortson, §4.7.
  28. Meier-Brügger et al.
  29. http://www.wilbourhall.org/index.html#panini The Astadhyayi of Panini
  30. Whitney, §527–541.
  31. Bucknell, §2.B.
  32. Whitney, §527–541.
  33. Whitney, §540.
  34. Coulson, 298.
  35. Bucknell, T27.
  36. Whitney, p. 520.
  37. Wilson, p. 622.
  38. Whitney, §735
  39. Burrow, §7.6.
  40. Whitney, §735.
  41. Burrow, §7.6.
  42. Whitney, §742.
  43. Burrow, §7.6.
  44. Whitney, §738.
  45. Whitney, §942–947.
  46. Burrow, §7.15.
  47. Whitney, §996–997.
  48. Whitney,§ 771.
  49. Bucknell, p. 38.
  50. Whitney, §1000–1005.
  51. Fortson, §5.60.
  52. Szemerényi, §9.6
  53. Bucknell, p. 59.
  54. Whitney, ch. 8–13.
  55. MM-W, p. 347.
  56. Fortson, §5.60–5.61.
  57. Burrow, §7.19.
  58. MM-W, p. 756.
  59. Bucknell, p. 181.
  60. Bucknell, p. 157.
  61. Bucknell, p. 191.
  62. Bucknell, p. 192.
  63. Bucknell, p. 178.
  64. Whitney, §13.951-3.
  65. Burrow, §7.19.
  66. Bucknell, p. 61.
  67. Whitney, ch. 9.
  68. Burrow, p. 369.
  69. Bucknell, p. 61.
  70. Whitney, §939.
  71. Whitney, §961–966.
  72. Bucknell, p. 63.
  73. Whitney, §802–806.
  74. Fortson, §5.59.
  75. Burrow, §7.17.
  76. Whitney, §968
  77. Burrow, §7.21.
  78. Whitney, §989–994.
  79. Bucknell, p. 63
  80. Whitney, ch. 8–15.