In > References for ‘indeclinable’
See also: indati · indebted · indecency · indecent · indecisive · indeclinables · indecorous · Indeed · indefinite · indefinitely
[25] Prátah means “in the morning”. Understand that prátah is indeclinable. So the first, second, fourth, [...] be out of place, since with an indeclinable word no suffix is added. Shirasi [...] well-wisher and your benefactor.
[6] (Here the term “Brahma” [...] Creator”. In the case of indeclinable words and adjectives the á [...] everything is permeated by Brahma.)
[1] The subject of todays discourse [...] that is, noun, adjective, pronoun, indeclinable, is placed in the sentence in [...] produced by mixing Greek and Semitic.
[112] 11) The eleventh meaning of the word kalya is “yesterday”. In this case the word is an indeclinable and it takes the form kalyam – as in neuter gender. Since the word is an indeclinable it will have no case endings, that is, kalyam is used in every case.
[113] 12) The twelfth meaning of the [...] which we call kalya, is also an indeclinable and its form also becomes kalyam.
[40] By adding the suffix t́hak [...] used since ancient times as an indeclinable.
[9] The “of” that I have used in the phrase “dancer of the court” is an indeclinable. Both prepositions and conjunctions [...] khuŕá, khuŕi.
[10] Anyhow, the compound word “court-dancer” is created by removing the indeclinable “of” and the definite [...] denote the sixth case. Now when an indeclinable or preposition is dropped in order to form a compound word it has to be seen which indeclinable or preposition is dropped and in which case it is used. Here the indeclinable “of” is dropped. “Of” [...] “yard of the court”.
[11] Similarly, “expert litterateur” [...] English “in” is an indeclinable. In Bengali e, te and ete are [...] gets the concerning samása.
[18] In Bengali grammar there is a difference [...] formed by dropping the English indeclinable “of” so this is tatpuruśa [...] – upapada samása.
[27] Some samása are completely dependent on the indeclinable. For example, in English one says [...] to the reading of the Chandi].
[28] Similarly, we use avyayiibháva [...] prátah [early morning] is an indeclinable in Sanskrit. It does not take [...] in Sanskrit, but while it is an indeclinable in Sanskrit it is a non-indeclinable in Bengali.
[15] I was discussing the use of the [...] is une tante. Anyhow the English indeclinable “in”, indicating the [...] indeclinables were created like this.
[16] Apart from the locative-indicating [...] Sanskrit does. Instead, a seventh case indeclinable is used to indicate the locative [...] and should be accepted as such.
[3] The next subject of discussion [...] for this. Similarly in Hindi the indeclinable se is used, in Oriya ru, etc.
[8] In Sanskrit the fifth case has [...] theke [from Ram]. In Hindi the indeclinable se is added to form the fifth [...] used to mean “to”.
[12] The modern Bengali word haite or hate comes from the word hante. The ablative-indicating indeclinable theke comes from the old Burmese [...] extensively in modern Bengali.
[13] All languages have an ablative [...] corresponding ablative-indicating indeclinable. For example, from maen [I] comes [...] ámár saunge, Rámer saunge.
[19] The languages of Bihar also have [...] in these languages by adding an indeclinable, se, after the sixth case form. [...] pronunciation is vrukśaru).
[14] Now let us move on to the second [...] accomplished with the help of an indeclinable to indicate the second case, sometimes [...] case-ending for the accusative. The indeclinable “to” indicating the [...] always used with the accusative.
[21] After this comes the third case. [...] form. In Bengali the instrumental indeclinable dvárá is used after [...] idiomatic expression of Hindi.
[22] The instrumental case exists in [...] same way by using an instrumental indeclinable. In English the prepositions “by” [...] seems that the error persists.
[32] In Sanskrit the fourth case is [...] on. In other words, all use an indeclinable denoting “for” along [...] example, asmad – mahyam.
[94] The word alaḿ was also used as an indeclinable. In that case its meaning was [...] upadesha is in the third case-ending.