A Grammar of the Tibetan Language: Literary and ColloquialMotilal Banarsidass Publ., 1996 - 396 páginas In this volume the author has dealt with both literary and colloquial Tibetan mostly in use around Lhasa. The important and elusive subjects of Pronunciation and spelling are given on principle more systematic and accurate treatment highlighting the subtle distinctions. The so-called Verb has also been elaborately treated keeping in view the genius of the Tibetan sentence, the construction of which is unique. |
Contenido
1 | |
8 | |
11 | |
15 | |
16 | 33 |
Writing and Punctuation | 45 |
III | 63 |
26 | 69 |
ADVERBS | 128 |
13 དང | 167 |
ཡིནཔ To | 235 |
Auxiliary Particles | 244 |
14 དུ ཏུ ར རུ སུ ལ | 258 |
G Subjunctive and Conditional Moods | 282 |
Probability | 288 |
The Passive Voice | 299 |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
A Grammar of the Tibetan Language: Literary and Colloquial Herbert Bruce Hannah Vista de fragmentos - 1991 |
Términos y frases comunes
according Active added adjective adverb affix Agent allowed annexed auxiliary called changes Colloquial common compact connection consonant construction Definite English Equivalent EXAMPLES exist expression Feminine final Future Future Root genitive Gerund give horizontal idea Imperative Indicative INDICATIVE MOOD Infinitive Initial John killed Lama letter Literary Tibetan Masculine Matt means MOOD Name negative never noun Participle particle Past Perfect Root Perhaps persons phrase Pitch plural possess preceding Prefix Present Present Root probably pronounced pronunciation qualified reference regards rendered represented Romanized rule seen semd sent sentence short simple sometimes sound stroke substantive syllable takes tense Terminative things Thou Tibet usually verb Verbal vowel-signs vowels write དེ འདུག ཡིན ཡིན་པ ཡོད ཡོད་པ རེད