On these page you will find Jayarava's answers to the exercises in Saṃskṛtasubodhinī : A Sanskrit Primer by Madhav Desphande
Different Unicode Devanāgarī fonts will combine some conjunct consonants differently.
For instance nna can be written these two ways:
Arial Unicode MS vs Times Ext Roman.
It all depends on your browser settings. I tend to prefer Arial Unicode MS for displaying Devanāgarī, but Times Ext Roman is clearly better for Roman diacritics.
In Firefox you can specify different fonts for Western and Devanāgarī. Not sure about Internet Explorer.
I'm focusing on the Sanskrit to English translations as this is what we are doing in class. At some point I may go back and do the English to Sanskrit examples.
They haven't been proofread, please send any corrections to Jayarava via the Visible Mantra email. If you'd like to undertake proof reading then drop me a line also - I'll credit you!
- Lesson One - 14/10/2008
- Lesson Two - 14/10/2008
- Lesson Three - 14/10/2008
- Lesson Four - 23/10/2008
- Lesson Five - 08/01/2009
- Lesson Six - 05/11/2008
- Lesson Seven - 10/11/2008
- Lesson Eight - 10/11/2008
- Lesson Nine - 18/11/2008
- Lesson Ten - 28/12/2008
- Lesson Eleven - 28/12/2008
- Lesson Twelve - 28/12/2008
- Lesson Thirteen - 02/01/2009
- Lesson Fourteen - 12/01/2009
- Lesson Fifteen - 02/02/2009
- Lesson Sixteen - 02/02/2009
- Lesson Seventeen - 02/02/2009
- Lesson Eighteen
- Lesson Nineteen - 18/05/2009
- Lesson Twenty
- Lesson Twenty One
- Lesson Twenty Two
- Lesson Twenty Three
- Lesson Twenty Four
- Lesson Twenty Five
- Lesson Twenty Six
- Lesson Twenty Seven
- Lesson Twenty Eight
- Lesson Twenty Nine
- Lesson Thirty
- Lesson Thirty One
- Lesson Thirty Two
- Lesson Thirty Three
- Lesson Thirty Four
- Lesson Thirty Five
- Lesson Thirty Six
- Lesson Thirty Seven
- Lesson Thirty Eight
- Lesson Thirty Nine
- Lesson Forty
- Lesson Forty One
- Lesson Forty Two
- Lesson Forty Three
- Lesson Forty Four