abhijānāti
Pali
Alternative forms
Alternative scripts
- 𑀅𑀪𑀺𑀚𑀸𑀦𑀸𑀢𑀺 (Brahmi script)
- अभिजानाति (Devanagari script)
- অভিজানাতি (Bengali script)
- අභිජානාති (Sinhalese script)
- အဘိဇာနာတိ or ဢꧤိၹႃၼႃတိ (Burmese script)
- อภิชานาติ or อะภิชานาติ (Thai script)
- ᩋᨽᩥᨩᩣᨶᩣᨲᩥ (Tai Tham script)
- ອຠິຊານາຕິ or ອະຠິຊານາຕິ (Lao script)
- អភិជានាតិ (Khmer script)
- 𑄃𑄞𑄨𑄎𑄂𑄚𑄂𑄖𑄨 (Chakma script)
Etymology
Verb
abhijānāti (root ñā, fifth conjugation)[1]
Conjugation
Conjugation of "abhijānāti"
| Singular | Plural | |
|---|---|---|
| Present | ||
| 1st | abhijānāmi | abhijānāma |
| 2nd | abhijānāsi | abhijānātha |
| 3rd | abhijānāti | abhijānanti |
| Imperative | ||
| 1st | abhijānāmi | abhijānāma |
| 2nd | abhijānā or abhijānāhi | abhijānātha |
| 3rd | abhijānātu | abhijānantu |
| Optative | ||
| 1st | abhijāneyyāmi or abhijāneyyaṃ | abhijāneyyāma |
| 2nd | abhijāneyyāsi | abhijāneyyātha |
| 3rd | abhijāneyya or abhijāne | abhijāneyyuṃ |
- Present active participle: abhijānant, which see for forms and usage
- Present middle participle: abhijānamāna, which see for forms and usage
- Past participle: abhiññāta, which see for forms and usage
References
- ^ Warder A.K. (2001) Introduction to Pali (overall work in English), Oxford: The Pali Text Society, page 376: “(ñ)ñā (V) jānāti”