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Practical Sanskrit Grammar

Only what you need for Gita reading. No excessive detail — just the concepts that unlock verse understanding.

THE 8 NOUN CASES (VIBHAKTI)

Sanskrit shows meaning through word endings rather than word order. 'Rama sees Krishna' and 'Krishna sees Rama' use the same words but different endings to show who does what.

Case Role Example
Nominative (1st)Subject — who does the actionātmā hanti — 'the soul kills'
Accusative (2nd)Object — who receives the actionātmānaṃ — 'the soul' (as object)
Instrumental (3rd)By means of — how something is doneyogena — 'by yoga'
Dative (4th)For the benefit of — purposebrahmaṇe — 'for Brahman'
Ablative (5th)From/because of — sourcekarma kāraṇāt — 'because of karma'
Genitive (6th)Of — possessionātmanas — 'of the soul'
Locative (7th)In/at — locationhṛdaye — 'in the heart'
Vocative (8th)Direct address — calling someonearjuna — 'O Arjuna'

VERB BASICS

Sanskrit verbs carry person (I/you/he), number (singular/dual/plural), and tense in their endings. For Gita reading, focus on recognizing these forms:

Present tense (-ati, -āti)
kuru = do! (command); karoti = he/she does; vadāmi = I speak
Imperative (command)
kuru = do! (Ch 3); arjuna, yuddhya = fight! (command forms)
Past tense (-a, -i endings)
uvāca = he said (very common in Gita); babhūva = became
Passive voice (-yate)
ucyate = is said; jñāyate = is known

COMPOUND WORDS (SAMĀSA)

Sanskrit loves compound words — multiple words joined into one. The Gita is full of them. Learn to split them:

nishkāma-karmanis (without) + kāma (desire) + karma (action) = desireless action
svadharmasva (own) + dharma (duty) = one's own duty
sthitaprajñasthita (steady) + prajña (wisdom) = one of steady wisdom
purushottamapuruṣa (person) + uttama (highest) = Supreme Person
karma-yogakarma (action) + yoga (union/skill) = yoga of action
jñāna-yogajñāna (knowledge) + yoga (path) = path of knowledge