Shiksha - Vedanga
Shiksha - Vedanga
Shiksha - Vedanga
For the Indian non-governmental organization, see discovery recorded in the Pratishakhya texts (particuShiksha (NGO). For the Yiddish slang word, see Shiksa. larly the Samaveda Pratishakhya, which is claimed to be
the earliest[1] ), is an organization of the stop consonant
Shiksha (Devanagari: IAST: ik) is one of the sounds into a 5x5 varga or square:
six Vedangas, treating the traditional Hindu science of
phonetics and phonology of Sanskrit.
ka kha ga gha a
ca cha ja jha a
Its aim is the teaching of the correct pronunciation of
a ha a ha a
the Vedic hymns and mantras. The oldest phonetic textbooks are the Pratishakyas (prtikhya, a vrddhi abta tha da dha na
stract from Sanskrit prati-kh), describing pronunciapa pha ba bha ma
tion and intonation of Sanskrit, as well as the Sanskrit
rules of sandhi (word combination) specic to individual
in which dierence between sounds is preserved whether
schools or Shakhas of the Vedas.
you recite it horizontally or vertically. It was extended
and completed with fricatives and sibilants, semi-vowels,
and vowels, and was eventually codied into the Brahmi
1 Pratishakhyas
alphabet, which is one of the most systematic sound-towriting mappings. Scholar Frits Staal has commented,
The Pratishakhyas, which evolved from the more ancient Mendelejevs Periodic system of elements, the varga sysVedic Texts padapathas (padapha) around 800 BCE, tem was the result of centuries of analysis. In the course
deal with the manner in which the Vedas are to be enun- of that development, the basic concepts of phonology
[2]
ciated. There are separate Pratishakhyas for each Veda. were discovered and dened. "
They complement the books called Shiksha written by The Varga system and the Pratishakshyas, contributions
various authorities.
of the Shiksha texts, are elaborate systems which deal
with the generation and classication of sound. According to the old tradition, sound is generated when four conditions are satised: a ground or base; an electromagnetic
Rigveda-Pratishakya (Shakala shakha), attributed to
force; a gravitational force implying the existence of other
Shaunaka
nearby bodies or particles; and space for the bodies to
expand. The middle two parameters generate vibration
Shukla Yajurveda-Pratishakhya
in the bodies. Depending upon the magnitude of these
Taittiriya (Krishna Yajurveda) Pratishakhya, ed. parameters, there are 304 types of sounds, out of which
Whitney 1871
12 types are within human audible range. The lowest of
these is called sphota, and the highest is called mahaghaAtharvaveda-Pratishakhya (Shaunakiya shakha)
narava.
Shaunakiya
shakha)
Chaturaadhyaayika
2
Aranya Shiksha
Siddhanta Shiksha
Atreya Shiksha
Svaraankusha Shiksha
Avasananirnyaya Shiksha
Bharadvaja Shiksha
Chandra Shiksha of Chandragomin (sutra form)
Charayaniya Shiksha
Galadrka Shiksha
Svarashtaka Shiksha
Svaravyanjana Shiksha
Vasishtha Shiksha
Varnaratnapradipa Shiksha
Kalanirnya Shiksha
Vyaali Shiksha
Katyayani Shiksha
Vyasa Shiksha
Shiksha
Yajnavalkya Shiksha
Kaundinya Shiksha
Keshavi Shiksha
SYLLABICITY
Although many of these Shiksha texts are attached to specic Vedic schools, others are late texts.
Kramakarika Shiksha
Kramasandhaana Shiksha
2 Syllabicity
Laghumoghanandini Shiksha
Lakshmikanta Shiksha
Lomashi Shiksha
Madhyandina Shiksha
Mandavya Shiksha
Mallasharmakrta Shiksha
Manasvaara Shiksha
Manduki Shiksha
Naradiya Shiksha
Paniniya Shiksha (versied)
Parashari Shiksha
Pari Shiksha
Pratishakhyapradipa Shiksha
Sarvasammata Shiksha
Sparsa : Stop
Antastha : Approximant
Usman: Sibilant
Shaishiriya Shiksha
Shamaana Shiksha
Shambhu Shiksha
Shodashashloki Shiksha
Shikshasamgraha
6.1
Eorts of articulation
Morae
3
Dantya : Dental
shtya : Labial
Apart from that, other articulations are combinations of
the above ve places:
Nasality
Pitch accent
Alpaprna : Unaspirated
Mahprna : Aspirated
vsa : Unvoiced
Places of articulation
Generally, in articulatory phonetics, the place of articulation (or point of articulation) of a consonant is the point of
contact, where an obstruction occurs in the vocal tract between an active (moving) articulator (typically some part
of the tongue) and a passive (stationary) articulator (typically some part of the roof of the mouth).
But according to Indian linguistic tradition,[5] there are
ve passive places of articulation:
Kahya : Velar
Tlavya : Palatal
Mrdhanya : Retroex
Nda : Voiced
7 See also
Shiva Sutra
Indias premier school search engine shiksha24.com
References
[1] Staal, J. F., The Fidelity of Oral Tradition and the Origins
of Science. North-Holland Publishing Company, 1986.
[2] Frits Staal, The science of language, Chapter 16 in Gavin
Flood, The Blackwell Companion to Hinduism Blackwell
Publishing, 2003, 599 pages ISBN 0-631-21535-2, p.
352.
[3] http://basudeba.blogspot.ca/2012/01/
ashta-siddhis-other-querries.html
[4] Siddhanta Kaumudi by Bhattoji Diksita and Laghu Siddhanta Kaumudi, by Varadaraja.
[5] Siddhanta Kaumudi by Bhattoji Diksita and Laghu Siddhanta Kaumudi, by Varadaraja.
[6] Telugulo Chandovisheshaalu, Page 127 (In Telugu).
REFERENCES
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