कुठार

Sanskrit

Alternative scripts

Etymology

Unknown.

  • Turner and some earlier sources argue for a borrowing from Dravidian (compare modern Tamil குடாரி (kuṭāri, axe)). However, Burrow convincingly showed that the Dravidian terms cannot be original (due to unusual vowel length in the Tamil and Malayalam terms) and are likely borrowed or derived from Sanskrit.[1]
  • Proponents of Fortunatov's law have supported inheritance from Proto-Indo-European *kl̥tḗr, with Latin culter (butcher's knife) as a cognate. Burrow compares Sanskrit कुलिश (kuliśa, axe) as evidence for a root *kul-. However, the formation of the Indo-European source is unusual and the aspiration in the Sanskrit word is still unexplained.

Pronunciation

Noun

कुठार • (kuṭhāra) stemm

  1. axe
  2. hoe, spade

Declension

Masculine a-stem declension of कुठार
singular dual plural
nominative कुठारः (kuṭhāraḥ) कुठारौ (kuṭhārau) कुठाराः (kuṭhārāḥ)
accusative कुठारम् (kuṭhāram) कुठारौ (kuṭhārau) कुठारान् (kuṭhārān)
instrumental कुठारेण (kuṭhāreṇa) कुठाराभ्याम् (kuṭhārābhyām) कुठारैः (kuṭhāraiḥ)
dative कुठाराय (kuṭhārāya) कुठाराभ्याम् (kuṭhārābhyām) कुठारेभ्यः (kuṭhārebhyaḥ)
ablative कुठारात् (kuṭhārāt) कुठाराभ्याम् (kuṭhārābhyām) कुठारेभ्यः (kuṭhārebhyaḥ)
genitive कुठारस्य (kuṭhārasya) कुठारयोः (kuṭhārayoḥ) कुठाराणाम् (kuṭhārāṇām)
locative कुठारे (kuṭhāre) कुठारयोः (kuṭhārayoḥ) कुठारेषु (kuṭhāreṣu)
vocative कुठार (kuṭhāra) कुठारौ (kuṭhārau) कुठाराः (kuṭhārāḥ)

Descendants

  • Pali: kuṭhārī
  • Prakrit: 𑀓𑀼𑀠𑀸𑀭 (kuḍhāra), 𑀓𑀼𑀳𑀸𑀟 (kuhāḍa)
  • Assamese: কুঠাৰ (kuthar) (learned)
  • Tamil: குடாரி (kuṭāri) (learned)

References

  1. ^ Burrow, Thomas (1972) “A Reconsideration of Fortunatov's Law”, in Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London[1], volume 35, number 3, page 540 of 531–545

Further reading