[Facts] Re: Pronunciations
in reply to a message by Array
The Sanskrit name kiran (dust or ray, from kRR, meaning to pour or scatter, with cognates in Greek; the rays of the sun was mythologized as the reigns holding the horses to the chariot on which he rides; only the meaning ray survives today) would have a small i as in hit rather than the long one in heat. I have heard it pronounced with a long I only by non-Indians. In Vedic, the stress was on the a; stress as a morphological feature disappeared in later language.The n would be retroflex in Sanskrit and those modern Indian languages that distinguish it from dental. The a would be a short sound, like in English run, and not long like in barn, though its exact pronounciation varies in the various languages.
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Messages

Pronunciations  ·  Susanjane190  ·  4/30/2005, 6:15 AM
Re: Pronunciations  ·  Array  ·  4/30/2005, 3:42 PM
Re: Pronunciations  ·  তন্ময় ভট  ·  5/1/2005, 5:44 PM
Thank you!  ·  Array  ·  5/2/2005, 3:16 PM
Re: Pronunciations  ·  Susanjane190  ·  4/30/2005, 6:32 PM
Re: Pronunciations  ·  Chrisell  ·  4/30/2005, 8:17 AM
Re: Pronunciations  ·  Susanjane190  ·  4/30/2005, 6:32 PM