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Indica by L.D. Barnett - 1. The Nighaṇṭu and the Nirukta. The oldest Indian treatise on etymology, philology, and semantics. Critically edited … and translated for the first time into English, with introduction, exegetical and critical notes, three indexes, and eight appendices, by Lakshman Sarup, M.A. (Panj.), D.Phil. (Oxon)… Sanskrit text, etc. 9¾ × 6½, pp. xxxix + 292. Lahore (University of the Panjab), 1927. - 2. Fragments of the Commentaries of Skandasvāmin and Maheśvara on the Nirukta. Edited… with an Introduction and Critical Notes by Lakshman Sarup, M.A. (Panj.), D.Phil. (Oxon) 10 × 7, pp. 15 + i + 139. Lahore (University of the Panjab), 1928.
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1. The Nighaṇṭu and the Nirukta. The oldest Indian treatise on etymology, philology, and semantics. Critically edited … and translated for the first time into English, with introduction, exegetical and critical notes, three indexes, and eight appendices, by Lakshman Sarup, M.A. (Panj.), D.Phil. (Oxon)… Sanskrit text, etc. 9¾ × 6½, pp. xxxix + 292. Lahore (University of the Panjab), 1927.
2. Fragments of the Commentaries of Skandasvāmin and Maheśvara on the Nirukta. Edited… with an Introduction and Critical Notes by Lakshman Sarup, M.A. (Panj.), D.Phil. (Oxon) 10 × 7, pp. 15 + i + 139. Lahore (University of the Panjab), 1928.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 March 2011
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- Copyright © The Royal Asiatic Society 1929