Tibetan Grammar & Vocab 2 Flashcards
དུད་ཙི་
“du-tsi” - nectar/amrita
སྙིང་བོ
“nying-bo” - heart-essence
ཡན་ལག་
“yan-lag” - branch
གི་
“ki” - of (connecting particle?)
ལས་
“le” - from(?) - connecting particle
དང་པོ་
“tang-po” - first
རྩི་བ་
“tsi-wa” - root
(note བ (ba) pronounced ‘wa’ at end.)
རྒྱུད་
“joot” - tantra
བྱ་བ་
“cha-wa” - to do (verb)
ཅེས་
“che” - to call/say (verb)
(ས silent as it commonly is at end of syllable)
In a two-letter syllable with no vowel, which is the root syllabe?
always the 1st.
A letter with a vowel is always the root syllable unless…
Unless it’s a phrase connector.
Re root syllables: letter swith superscribed or subscribed letters….
Are always the root letter of the syllable.
In a four letter syllable…
The 2nd letter is always the root letter.
In a three letter syllable…
The middle letter is usually the root.
In a three letter syllable, the middle letter is not the root when…
The last letter is a secondary suffice.
(ས or ད are the only secondary suffixes.)
When this is the case, the root letter can be either the first or second letter.
ག ད བ མ འ
These letters are…
The five prefixes. They are never pronounced but sometimes change the sound of the root letter that follows them.
གནམ་
“nahm” - Sky
(note silent prefix)
གཉིས་
“nyî” - Two
(note silent prefix)
དབྱར་ཁ་
“jyar-kha” - Summer
(note silent prefix)
བདུན་ཕྲག་
“dün-thak” - Week
(note prefix, which negates asperation but not tone on དུ)
མཚོ་
“ts’ho” - Lake
(note silent prefix)
མངར་མོ་
“ngar-mo” - Sweet
(note silent prefix)
འཁོར་ལོ་
“kor-lo” - Wheel
(note silent prefix)