Sanskrit pronouns and determiners
Sanskrit pronouns are declined for case, number, and gender. The pronominal declension applies to a few adjectives as well.
Many pronouns have alternative enclitic forms.
First- and second-person pronouns
Sanskrit pronouns in the first and second person (uttamapuruṣa and madhyamapuruṣa, respectively) resemble one another in how they are declined, and similarly do not mark gender. These pronouns have shortened, enclitic forms in the accusative, dative, and genitive cases (in parentheses in the table below).[1]
First Person | Second Person | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Singular | Dual | Plural | Singular | Dual | Plural | |
Nominative | aham | āvām | vayam | tvam | yuvām | yūyam |
Accusative | mām (mā) | āvām (nau) | asmān (naḥ) | tvām (tvā) | yuvām (vām) | yuṣmān (vaḥ) |
Instrumental | mayā | āvābhyām | asmābhiḥ | tvayā | yuvābhyām | yuṣmābhiḥ |
Dative | mahyam (me) | āvābhyām (nau) | asmabhyam (naḥ) | tubhyam (te) | yuvābhyām (vām) | yuṣmabhyam (vaḥ) |
Ablative | mat | āvābhyām | asmat | tvat | yuvābhyām | yuṣmat |
Genitive | mama (me) | āvayoḥ (nau) | asmākam (naḥ) | tava (te) | yuvayoḥ (vām) | yuṣmākam (vaḥ) |
Locative | mayi | āvayoḥ | asmāsu | tvayi | yuvayoḥ | yuṣmāsu |
Demonstratives
Sanskrit does not have true third person pronouns, but its demonstratives play this role when they stand independently of a substantive. The four different demonstratives in Sanskrit (cited in their neuter nominative/accusative singular form) are: tat, adaḥ, idam, and etat. Both tat and adaḥ are used for objects of reference that are far away, but the latter is more emphatic. Both are translated by the English distal demonstrative that. By contrast, idam and etat are used for nearby objects, and, again, the latter is more emphatic and has a strong deictic meaning. These two pronouns are translated by the English proximal demonstrative this.[2]
The tat paradigm is given below. Note that the masculine singular nominative form saḥ exhibits irregular sandhi behaviour—before consonants it becomes sa, giving, for instance, sa gajaḥ ("that elephant") rather than the expected *so gajaḥ.[3] This phonological irregularity does not carry over to pronouns analogous to tat such as etat, kim, and yat.
Masculine | Neuter | Feminine | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Singular | Dual | Plural | Singular | Dual | Plural | Singular | Dual | Plural | |
Nominative | sáḥ | táu | té | tát | té | tā́ni | sā́ | té | tā́ḥ |
Accusative | tám | táu | tā́n | tát | té | tā́ni | tā́m | té | tā́ḥ |
Instrumental | téna | tā́bhyām | táiḥ | téna | tā́bhyām | táiḥ | táyā | tā́bhyām | tā́bhiḥ |
Dative | tásmai | tā́bhyām | tébhyaḥ | tásmai | tā́bhyām | tébhyaḥ | tásyai | tā́bhyām | tā́bhyaḥ |
Ablative | tásmāt | tā́bhyām | tébhyaḥ | tásmāt | tā́bhyām | tébhyaḥ | tásyāḥ | tā́bhyām | tā́bhyaḥ |
Genitive | tásya | táyoḥ | téṣām | tásya | táyoḥ | téṣām | tásyāḥ | táyoḥ | tā́sām |
Locative | tásmin | táyoḥ | téṣu | tásmin | táyoḥ | téṣu | tásyām | táyoḥ | tā́su |
etat, is declined almost identically to tat. Its paradigm is obtained by prefixing e- to all the forms of tat. As a result of a general sandhi rule requiring the retroflexion of s in certain environments,[4][5] the masculine and feminine nominative singular forms of this pronoun are eṣaḥ and eṣā.[6]
The idam paradigm is given below. Its declension is somewhat irregular because it is formed from two different stems, i- and a-, both of which also form proximal pro-adverbs (for example, atra and iha both mean "here", and ataḥ and itaḥ both mean "in this way").[7]
Masculine | Neuter | Feminine | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Singular | Dual | Plural | Singular | Dual | Plural | Singular | Dual | Plural | |
Nominative | ayam | imau | ime | idam | ime | imāni | iyam | ime | imāḥ |
Accusative | imam | imau | imān | idam | ime | imāni | imām | ime | imāḥ |
Instrumental | anena | ābhyām | ebhiḥ | anena | ābhyām | ebhiḥ | anayā | ābhyām | ābhiḥ |
Dative | asmai | ābhyām | ebhyaḥ | asmai | ābhyām | ebhyaḥ | asyai | ābhyām | ābhyaḥ |
Ablative | asmāt | ābhyām | ebhyaḥ | asmāt | ābhyām | ebhyaḥ | asyāḥ | ābhyām | ābhyaḥ |
Genitive | asya | anayoḥ | eṣām | asya | anayoḥ | eṣām | asyāḥ | anayoḥ | āsām |
Locative | asmin | anayoḥ | eṣu | asmin | anayoḥ | eṣu | asyām | anayoḥ | āsu |
The adaḥ paradigm is given below.
Masculine | Neuter | Feminine | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Singular | Dual | Plural | Singular | Dual | Plural | Singular | Dual | Plural | |
Nominative | asau | amū | amī | adaḥ | amū | amūni | asau | amū | amūḥ |
Accusative | amum | amū | amūn | adaḥ | amū | amūni | amūm | amū | amūḥ |
Instrumental | amunā | amūbhyām | amībhiḥ | amunā | amūbhyām | amībhiḥ | amuyā | amūbhyām | amūbhiḥ |
Dative | amuṣmai | amūbhyām | amībhyaḥ | amuṣmai | amūbhyām | amībhyaḥ | amuṣyai | amūbhyām | amūbhyaḥ |
Ablative | amuṣmāt | amūbhyām | amībhyaḥ | amuṣmāt | amūbhyām | amībhyaḥ | amuṣyāḥ | amūbhyām | amūbhyaḥ |
Genitive | amuṣya | amuyoḥ | amīṣām | amuṣya | amuyoḥ | amīṣām | amuṣyāḥ | amuyoḥ | amūṣām |
Locative | amuṣmin | amuyoḥ | amīṣu | amuṣmin | amuyoḥ | amīṣu | amuṣyām | amuyoḥ | amūṣu |
Enclitic pronouns
The enclitic pronoun enam is found only in a few oblique cases and numbers. It is unemphatic and mostly refers to persons.[8]
Singular | Dual | Plural | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Masc. | Neu. | Fem. | Masc. | Neu. | Fem. | Masc. | Neu. | Fem. | |
Accusative | enam | enat | enām | enau | ene | enān | enāni | enāḥ | |
Instrumental | enena | ||||||||
Genitive/locative | enayoḥ |
The k-y-t series of interrogative, relative, and correlative pronouns
In Sanskrit, interrogative and relative pronouns are formed analogously to tat. The interrogative pronoun kim is declined like tat, replacing the initial t or s with k. The only exception to this rule is the neuter nominative/accusative singular form, which is kim rather than the expected *kat. The relative pronoun yat is declined like tat, without exception replacing the initial t or s with y.[9]
The demonstrative tat functions as a correlative pronoun when used in "independent clauses that 'complete' relative clauses to form complex sentences"—unlike in English (where one can say, for example, "The girl with whom you were speaking is my sister"), relative pronouns must be accompanied by correlative pronouns (which, if applied to the previous example, would be: "The girl with whom you are speaking, she is my sister").[10]
For a Sanskrit example of a complex sentence using corresponding relative and correlative pronouns, consider: yasmin vane vasati rāmas tasmin vane na vidyante rākṣasāḥ ("In the forest where Rāma lives, there are no demons"). In that example, the pronouns are alike in gender, number, and case, but matching relative–correlative pronouns need not be alike in case—for example: yena puruṣeṇa saha bhāṣate nṛpaḥ sa muniḥ ("The man with whom the king is speaking is a sage").[11]
Indefinite and absolute negative phrases
Aside from their primary uses, the interrogative and relative pronouns are also used to form indefinite phrases. The two ways of forming indefinite phrases are:
- placing a relative pronoun before its corresponding interrogative pronoun, which in turn is followed by the particle api (for example: yat kim api, which means "something or another"), and
- placing one of api, cana, or cit after the interrogative pronoun (for example: kiṃcit, which means "something").
As is evident in the examples, the first method of indicating indefiniteness is stronger, while the latter is more subtle and can simply be translated by an indefinite article in English. [12]
The absolute negative, semantically functioning as the negation of existential quantification, is formed by negating an indefinite phrase.[13]
Reflexive pronouns
There are a number of words in Sanskrit that function as reflexive pronouns. The indeclinable svayam can indicate reflexivity pertaining to subjects of any person or number, and—since subjects in Sanskrit can appear in the nominative, instrumental, or genitive cases—it can have the sense of any of these cases. The noun ātman ("self") and adjective svaḥ ("own"; cf. Latin suus) decline so as to express reflexivity in any case, person, and number. The former is always in the masculine, even when used in relation to a female subject, but the latter declines for gender.[14]
Pronominal adjectives
The several adjectives in Sanskrit are declined pronominally. That is, their declension differs from ordinary adjectival declension of a-stems and instead follows the declension of tat in certain respects.
- anya ("other"), anyatara ("either"), itara ("other"), katara ("which of two?"), katama ("which of many?"), and ekatama ("one of many") all follow the tat paradigm exactly.
- sarva ("every", "all"), ubhaya ("both"), eka ("one"), and ekatara ("either") follow the tat paradigm except in the neuter nominative/accusative singular, ending in -m rather than -t.
- pūrva ("prior", "east"), avara ("posterior", "west"), adhara ("inferior", "west"), uttara ("subsequent", "north"), dakṣiṇa ("south"), para ("subsequent", "other", "opposite"), apara ("other", "inferior"), antara ("outer"), and sva ("own") follow the tat paradigm except (1) in the neuter nominative/accusative singular, ending in -am rather than -at; (2) in the masculine/neuter ablative and locative singular, sometimes (though not necessarily) ending in -āt and -e rather than -asmāt and -asmin; and (3) in the masculine nominative plural, sometimes (though not necessarily) ending in -āḥ rather than -e.
- ardha ("half"), alpa ("little"), katipaya ("some"), prathama ("first"), carama ("last"), and dvaya/dvitaya ("twofold") generally follow the regular adjective declension for a-stems but sometimes (though not necessarily) follow tat in the masculine nominative plural, ending in -e rather than -āḥ.
- dvitīya ("second") and tṛtīya ("third") optionally follow the declension of tat in the forms of the oblique cases in the singular.
Note that when any of these adjectives are at the end of a compound, they decline exactly like ordinary a-stem adjectives.[15]
Notes
- ↑ Goldman & Goldman, §4.46, pp. 71 - 3.
- ↑ Coulson, pp. 62 - 3, 76 - 7.
- ↑ Coulson, p. 46
- ↑ Coulson, pp. 65 - 6.
- ↑ Goldman & Goldman, §3.58, p. 43.
- ↑ Coulson, pp. 62 - 3.
- ↑ Coulson, p. 76.
- ↑ Coulson, p. 151.
- ↑ Goldman & Goldman, §6.14, p. 103.
- ↑ Goldman & Goldman, §6.3, pp. 97 - 8.
- ↑ Goldman & Goldman, §6.15, pp. 103 - 4.
- ↑ Goldman & Goldman, §§6.17 - 6.19, p. 105.
- ↑ Goldman & Goldman, §6.20, p. 105.
- ↑ MacDonell, III.115, p. 79
- ↑ MacDonell, III.120, pp. 81 - 2.
References
- Coulson, Michael. Teach Yourself Sanskrit. Oxford: Hodder and Stoughton, 1986. (ISBN 0-340-32389-2)
- Goldman, Robert P., and Sally J. Sutherland Goldman. Devavāṇīpraveśikā: An Introduction to the Sanskrit Language. Berkeley: Center for South Asian Studies, 2004. (ISBN 0-944613-40-3)
- Macdonell, A. A. A Sanskrit Grammar for Students. London: Oxford UP, 1927. (ISBN 81-246-0094-5)