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founded by S. N. Goenka in the tradition of Sayagyi U Ba Khin

 

 

 

 

 

Lesson 1 - Declension of masculine nouns ending in -a Nominative case, singular and plural Present, third, singular and plural verbs

1. VOCABULARY


1. Masculine nouns ending in -a

Buddha / Tathāgata / Sugata

- the Buddha

manussa

- man, human being

nara / purisa

- man, person

kassaka

- farmer

brāhmaṇa

- brahmin

putta

- son

mātula

- uncle

kumāra

- boy

vāṇija

- merchant

bhūpāla

- king

sahāya / sahāyaka / mitta

- friend

 

   


Verbs

  

bhāsati

speaks

pacati

cooks

kasati

ploughs

bhuñjati

eats

sayati

sleeps

passati

sees

chindati

cuts

gacchati

goes

āgacchati

comes

dhāvati

runs

 

 

2. Declension of masculine nouns ending in -a



Nominative case:

The case ending -o is added to the nominal base to form the nominative case singular number.

The case ending -ā is added to the nominal base to form the nominative case plural number.

A noun thus inflected is used as the subject of a sentence.

 

Singular

1. nara + o = naro 

2. mātula + o = mātulo

3. kassaka + o = kassako

Plural 

1. nara + ā = narā

2. mātula + ā = mātulā

3. kassaka + ā = kassakā

 

3. Present, third, singular and plural verbs.

In the verbs listed above bhāsa, paca, kasa etc. are verbal bases and -ti is the present tense, third person, singular termination.

The present tense, third person, plural is formed by adding the termination -nti to the base.

 

Singular

bhāsati - He speaks

pacati - He cooks

kasati - He ploughs

Plural

bhāsanti - They speak

pacanti - They cook

kasanti - They plough


  

4. Examples in sentence formation

Singular

1. Naro bhāsati - The man speaks.

2. Mātulo pacati - The uncle cooks.

3. Kassako kasati - The farmer ploughs.

Plural

1. Narā bhāsanti - Men speak.

2. Mātulā pacanti - Uncles cook.

3. Kassakā kasanti - Farmers plough.

  


  

Exercise 1 

5. Translate into English

1. Bhūpālo bhuñjati. 

2. Puttā sayanti

3. Vāṇijā sayanti

4. Buddho passati

5. Kumāro dhāvati.

6. Mātulo kasati.

7. Brāhmaṇā bhāsanti.

8. Mittā gacchanti.

9. Kassakā pacanti.

10. Manusso chindati.

11. Purisā dhāvanti.

12. Sahāyako bhuñjati.

13. Tathāgato bhāsati.

14. Naro pacati.

15. Sahāyā kasanti.

16. Sugato āgacchati.

 


  

6. Translate into Pāli

1. Sons run.

2. The uncle sees.

3. The Buddha comes.

4. Boys eat.

5. Merchants go.

6. The man sleeps.

7. Kings go.

8. The brahmin cuts.

9. Friends speak.

10. The farmer ploughs.

11. The merchant comes.

12. Sons cut.

13. Uncles speak.

14. The boy runs.

15. The friend speaks.

16. The Buddha sees.

  


  

  

 

 

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