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About
Sanskrit
By 400BC a Hindu Indian
grammarian by the name of Panini had formally recorded rules of Sanskrit
grammar. This is known as the Ashtadhyayi.
The Ashtadhyayi consists of eight chapters, each divided into four
sections, or ‘padas’. It characterises the difference between the
language of the sacred texts and that of common street language. 3,959
rules of Sanskrit morphology have been set out, much in the way of a
mathematical function, to define the basic elements of the language
including sentence structure, vowels, consonants, nouns, and verbs.
Panini’s work is still used in the teaching of Sanskrit today.
Classical Sanskrit, as opposed to its more archaic ancestor Vedic
Sanskrit, was in its height in the centuries AD. From it came a vast
body of philosophical, scientific and religious knowledge, as well as
Hindu scriptures and classical literature. These include works such as
the Gita and Ramayana.

The extraordinary thing about Sanskrit is that it offers direct
accessibility to anyone to that elevated plane where the two mathematics
and music, brain and heart, analytical and intuitive, scientific and
spiritual become one. It is the language of Classical Hinduism and the
language of the Vedic and Upanishadic scriptures. Sanskrit is an ancient
language like Latin and Hebrew. It means, one that is reformed/refined.
The word Sanskriti, which means culture is a derivative of the same
word. There are very few Sanskrit scholars in the world today and there
are countless Sanskrit texts whose true meaning we may never know.
The origin of Sanskrit can be accredited to the Vedic society. Vedic
Sanskrit is believed to date back to the 2nd millennium BC, when
knowledge was handed down through the generations verbally.
Mystic traditions of India ascribe a wholly sacred origin to the
language, describing it as the language of the gods. When westerners
began to take serious interest in the language some two hundred years
ago, Sir William Jones, a British judge and orientalist, noted that
Sanskrit possessed vocabulary and grammatical structures very similar to
many other languages, including Greek, Latin, and even English. This
discovery gave rise to the study of comparative linguistics, which
groups the languages of the world into families. Sanskrit, along with
about half of the world's languages, is a member of the Indo-European
language family. This family has many branches and sub-divisions.
Linguists place Sanskrit among the Indic languages of the Indo-Iranian
branch. What common source may have given rise to this wide variety of
related languages is entirely hidden by the mists of time.
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