शनिवार, 13 अप्रैल 2019

Greatness of Sanskrit Language

Greatness of Sanskrit

Now let us go to the ancient Indian language SANSKRIT-- which is the oldest language in the world , with the most immense vocabulary, clear speech, perfect pronunciation, accurate expression and politeness. 

Since Panini wrote the adaptable Sankrit grammar 7500 years ago, there has been NO changes, it is that perfect-- the work of a genius!! 

Rig veda was written in 5000 BC in Sanskrit. 

The Sanskrit language came from the 12 strand DNA of Vedic seers , with king size pineal glands who inhabited the banks of the river Saraswati from 9000 BC till it dried up in 4000 BC, due to tectonic shifts blocking the himalayan glacier source -- The Saraswati elite then migrated all over even to Europe and Russia. This is why European languages have Sanskrit similarities.

Sanskrit has a construct like geometry in cymatics and can be digitalised. IT IS POSSIBLE TO MAKE CONSCIOUS COMPUTERS IF THIS LANGUAGE IS ADAPTED TO COMPUTERS. It can be adapted to Backus-Naur Form grammar that is used to describe modern programming languages today. The 12 strand Vedic Maharishis had beautiful FRACTAL MINDS, and could see even numerical problems as fractals


There is no communication every year , like for English " the following new words have been added to the Oxford English dictonary in the year 2009". Sanskrit has no meanings by connotations and hence cannot age. It has perfect morphology that leaves no room for error. 

NASA had declared that sanskrit is the only unambiguous spoken language on the planet. Its alphabets are impeccably arranged. There are no proper nouns in Sanskrit. Every single Sanskrit word has a meaning built into the word itself.

The principles of sound harmonics working precisely and consistently through the entire language, from the basic four sounds through thousands of words and their variations. The way words unfold from their seed forms is amazing. The mathematical precision throughout the language and give it its extraordinary power .



There is a direct link between the sound and signs,it is phonetic. The writing of Sanskrit language is based on the sound of the spoken form. Sanskrit has no spelling, nor there are any silent letters . There is logic in its sound system, and a natural continuity in its word-making as well as sentence-making. Sanskrit sentence structure is flexible--to hell with syntax. The order of words in a sentence does not matter.


Sanskrit has three genders (masculine, feminine, and neuter), three numbers (singular, dual, and plural), and eight cases (nominative, accusative, instrumental, dative, ablative, genitive, locative, and vocative), although only in the singular of the most common declension does a noun show different forms for each case. Adjectives are inflected to agree with nouns. Verbs are inflected for tense, mode, voice, number, and person.

There is a vibration or resonance in the sounds of Sanskrit and hence is the choice language for mantras.( CYMATICS )


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Once in a Korean drydock , one of my naughty officers took the written work sheet of a foreman , and using the same pen added a few strokes here and there to the prose . The same foreman when he came back ,could not make out what he himself wrote a few minutes ago.

BOTTOM LINE IN ENGLISH:

When the stars are out they are visible
But when the lights are out they are invisible 
And why it is that when I wind up my watch it starts 
But when I wind up this piece it ends?


--- to hell with the ridiculous spelling bee contest -- a wart counting competition would be better. Only stupid languages have spelling.


ramah ramau ramaah -Nominative
ramam ramau raman -Accusative
ramena ramabhyam ramaihi - Instrumental
ramaya ramabhyam ramebhyah -Dative
ramat ramabhyam ramabhyah - Ablative
ramasya ramyoh ramanam- Genitive
rame ramyoho rameshu -Locative
he ram! he ramau! he ramaah!

Sir William Jones, British Orientalist: “The Sanskrit language, whatever be its antiquity is of wonderful structure, more perfect than the Greek, more copious than the Latin and more exquisitely refined than either.”


Sanskrit grammar has extensive  grammatical tenses.  There are ten tenses: one form for the present tense, three forms for the past tense and two forms for the future tense.

There is also imperative mood, potential mood, benedictive mood (called asheerling, which is used for indicating a blessing), and conditional.  Each tense has three separate words for each of the three grammatical persons (first person, second person and third person), and it further distinguishes if it’s referring to one, two, or more than two people (called eakvachan, dvivachan and bahuvachan).

There are three categories of the verbs called atmanepadi, parasmaipadi and ubhaipadi. These forms indicate whether the outcome of the action is related to the doer or the other person or both. In this way there are ninety forms of one single verb.

Sanskrit words are formed of a root word called dhatu.  For instance: kri root word means ‘to do,’ gam root word means ‘to go.’ So, there are ninety forms of each of these verbs like, karoti, kurutah, kurvanti, and gachchati, gachchatah, gachchanti etc.  There are ready-made single words for all kinds of uses and situations.

There are words for all the three genders and each word has twenty-one forms of its own which covers every situation. Then there is a very elaborate and precise system of composing, phrasing, making a sentence, joining two words and coining any number of words according to the need.

Sanskrit grammar has the capacity for creating any number of new words for a new situation or concept or thing. 

The morphology of word formation is unique and of its own kind where a word is formed from a tiny seed root (called dhatu) in a precise grammatical order which has been the same since the very beginning. 

Any number of desired words could be created through its root words and the prefix and suffix system as detailed in the Ashtadhyayi of Panini.  Furthermore, 90 forms of each verb and 21 forms of each noun or pronoun could be formed that could be used in any situation.


Its vowels are the actual ‘voice pattern’ of the sound and consonants are only the ‘form’ of the ‘voice pattern’ of the sound. So a consonant  alone cannot be pronounced as it is only a ‘form’ of the ‘voice pattern’ until it is attached to a vowel. hus, a vowel, which itself is a ‘voice pattern,’ can be pronounced alone (like,) or it can be modulated by adding a consonant to it (like,).