Pronunciation of Sanskrit words: Difference between revisions
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* Goldman Robert. ''Devavāṇīpraveśikā: An Introduction to the Sanskrit Language''. | * Goldman Robert. ''Devavāṇīpraveśikā: An Introduction to the Sanskrit Language''. | ||
* Deshpande Madhav. ''Samskrta-Subodhini: A Sanskrit Primer''. Center for South and Southeast Asian Studies, University of Michigan, 1997. | * Deshpande Madhav. ''Samskrta-Subodhini: A Sanskrit Primer''. Center for South and Southeast Asian Studies, University of Michigan, 1997. | ||
* Rodrigues Hillary. Hinduism: The Ebook. JBE Online Books, 2006. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass, 2011. | * Rodrigues Hillary. ''Hinduism: The Ebook''. JBE Online Books, 2006. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass, 2011. | ||
* Charles Wikner's ''A practical Sanskrit Introductory'' and ''Sanskrit für Anfänger'' by Thomas Lehman. | * Charles Wikner's ''A practical Sanskrit Introductory'' and ''Sanskrit für Anfänger'' by Thomas Lehman. | ||
Revision as of 16:38, 6 August 2016
Since the Sanskrit alphabet consists of a number of letters and sounds that do not exist in the Latin alphabet, certain additional signs, so-called diacritics are required in the Latin script for the representation and transliteration of these sounds. In Sanskrit each letter represents one and only one sound. In English the letter a for example may indicate many sounds (e.g. fat, fate, fare, far) but not so in Sanskrit. Sanskrit follows very regular rules and contains no “silent letters” such as those in English.
There are five different kinds of diacritical signs:
- a horizontal line on top of a vowel. E.g. ā
- a dot on top for the guttural nasal sound ṅ
- a dot underneath a letter. Eg. ṭ
- a tilde for the palatal nasal sound ñ
- an accent for the palatal sibilant ś
Pronunciation:
- each syllable received approximately the same emphasis; vowels are lengthened rather than stressed.
- a horizontal line on top of a vowel (e.g. ā) indicates a long vowel. Long vowels are held for about twice the length than their corresponding short vowels. E.g. a is pronounced like the "a" in "fat", and ā is pronounced like the "a" in "father" or as in "harm". This becomes apparent, e.g. with the words Tathāgata or Padmākara. Here, the emphasis lies on ā.
- e, o, ai, and au can be counted as long vowels and thus the vocal length is prolonged as well. This becomes apparent, e.g. with the word Vairocana. Thus, ai and o are held longer than the two following short a's.
- ṛ is counted as a vowel in Sanskrit. The sound of ṛ is a combination of "r" followed by a short "ee"-sound, e.g. as in "rich", unlike "reef". This becomes apparent, e.g. with the word Amṛta.
- a dot on top for the guttural nasal sound ṅ. E.g. like in wrong. This becomes apparent, e.g. with the word Saṅgha.
- a dot underneath for reflection. In the case of the letters ḷ, ṭ, ḍ, ṇ, ṃ, the difference is too subtle, so we can neglect this and pronounce the letter as if there was no dot.
- the ḥ is an unvoiced breath following a vowel. This becomes apparent, e.g. with the syllable āḥ.
- an accent for the palatal sibilant ś equals a "sh"-sound, like in fresh. This becomes apparent, e.g. with the words Śūnyatā, Śākyamuni or Śāripūtra.
- the sound is very similar to ś. This becomes apparent, e.g. with the word Śeṣa.
- a tilde for the palatal nasal sound ñ. This sounds equals ny, like in canyon. This becomes apparent, e.g. with the word Mañjuśrī.
- The aspirated consonants (kh, gh, ch, jh, th, dh, th, dh, ph, bh) are pronounced as the consonant plus a noticeable aspiration of breath.
- an additional important point for English speakers is that the Sanskrit consonant ca is pronounced like the ch in chip and not like the ca in catch. This becomes apparent, e.g. with the word cāmara or Cakrasaṃvara.
Commonly used conjunct consonants, that is a combination of two or three consonants, are:
- kṣa pronounced kscha. This becomes apparent, e.g. with the words rākṣasa and kṣatriya.
- tra pronounced like the tra in trap. This becomes apparent, e.g. with the word mantra.
- jñā is pronounced "j-nya". This becomes apparent, e.g. with the words jñāna (pronounced j-nyana) and prajñāpāramitā (pronounced praj-nya-paramita) [1]
Overview
a | but not bat |
ā | harm not ham |
i | pink |
ī | peep |
u | put |
ū | boot |
ṛ | rich |
ḷ | table |
e | mess |
ai | aisle or pie |
o | beau |
au | down or hound |
References
- Goldman Robert. Devavāṇīpraveśikā: An Introduction to the Sanskrit Language.
- Deshpande Madhav. Samskrta-Subodhini: A Sanskrit Primer. Center for South and Southeast Asian Studies, University of Michigan, 1997.
- Rodrigues Hillary. Hinduism: The Ebook. JBE Online Books, 2006. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass, 2011.
- Charles Wikner's A practical Sanskrit Introductory and Sanskrit für Anfänger by Thomas Lehman.
Notes
- ↑ Depending on the area jñā may also be pronounced "gya". This becomes apparent, e.g. with the words jñāna (pronounced gyana) and prajñāpāramitā (pronounced pra-gya-paramita)