Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Nighantu

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Nighaṇṭu (Sanskrit:निघण्टु,IPA:[nɪɡʱɐɳʈʊ]) is aSanskrit term for a traditional collection of words, grouped into thematic categories, often with brief annotations. Such collections share characteristics withglossaries andthesauri, but are not truelexicons, such as the kośa of Sanskrit literature. Particular collections are also callednighaṇṭava.

While a number of nighantavas devoted to specialized subjects exist, the eponymous Nighantu of the genre is an ancient collection, handed down fromVedic times. It was the subject of theNirukta,[1] a commentary, together with a treatise on etymology, byYaska. Technically, Yaska's Nirukta should designate his commentary only, but traditionally the Nighantu has been understood to be included in it.

The Traditional Nighantu

[edit]

According to Yaska (Nirukta 1.20), the Nighantu was a collection of rare or difficult words gathered by earlier sages for easier understanding of Vedic texts that perhaps they may not have fully understood themselves. The collection comprises fiveadhyāyas or chapters, in threekāṇḍas or books:

  • naighaṇṭuka kāṇḍa: threeadhyāyas of similes, synonyms, metonyms and other glosses. The firstadhyāya deals mainly with physical things and objects of nature. The secondadhyāya deals mainly with man, his physical being, and qualities associated with his being, such as property and emotional states. The thirdadhyāya deals mainly with abstract qualities and concepts.
  • naigama kāṇḍa: oneadhyāya of homonyms (aikapadikam) and particularly difficult or ambiguous words.
  • daivata kāṇḍa: oneadhyāya of epithets of divine beings.

Yaska's Nirukta covers the Naighantuka somewhat synoptically, often merely echoing a given gloss, but deals with the 278 words of the Naigama and the 151 names of the Daivata in detail. A full word-by-word commentary on the Naighantuka was written byDevarajayajvan, some time before the 14th CE.[2]

A critical edition of the Nighantu and the Nirukta was published in the 1920s by Lakshman Sarup. In it, two major recensions were identified, one longer than the other, indicating additions at untraceable yet relatively early dates. It is now customary to render both recensions together, with the additions of the longer recension in parentheses.

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^samāmnāyaḥ samāmnātaḥ ; sa vyākhyātavyaḥ ; tamimaṃ samāmnāyaṃ nighaṇṭava ityācakṣate (Nirukta 1.1)
  2. ^Sarup, Part I, p.50

References

[edit]
  • Lakshman Sarup,The Nighantu and The Nirukta (London, H. Milford 1920-29), Repr. Motilal Banarsidass 2002,ISBN 81-208-1381-2.
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Nighantu&oldid=1255769218"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp