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The Sanskrit He Version 2.85 [2015 Welcome to the Sanskrit Heritage site. It provides various servic The first service is dictionary access. The dictionary is a hyper with grammatical information. There are currently two versions of The first one is the original Heritage Sanskrit-French dictionary equipped with grammatical tools. Furthermore it offers a rich enc download a printable pdf version of this dictionary, as explained is also available. The second lexicon is a digital version of the Monier-Williams Sa the Sanskrit language. It is issued from Thomas Malten's digitali into an XML databank by Jim Funderburk, and finally adapted to th Heritage dictionary is thus mirrored in the Monier-Williams, whic The choice of the dictionary is set to a default by the configura separately by its search page, respectively Sanskrit Heritage and This site offers a number of linguistic services for the Sanskrit transliterated text into Sanskrit banks of tagged hypertext. Vari as explained below. Sanskrit Heritage dictionary in book form You may download the pdf file of the Heritage dictionary from PDF known document management software from Adobe freely available on

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The Sanskrit Heritage Site

Version 2.85 [2015-02-19] (en)

Welcome to the Sanskrit Heritage site. It provides various services for the computational treatment of Sanskrit.The first service is dictionary access. The dictionary is a hypertext structure giving access to the Sanskrit lexicon, given with grammatical information. There are currently two versions of the dictionary.The first one is the original Heritage Sanskrit-French dictionary, which serves as morphology generator, and is thus fully equipped with grammatical tools. Furthermore it offers a rich encyclopedic contents about Indian culture. You may also download a printable pdf version of this dictionary, as explained below. A fully hypertext version in the Goldendict format is also available.The second lexicon is a digital version of the Monier-Williams Sanskrit-English dictionary, a much more complete lexicon for the Sanskrit language. It is issued from Thomas Malten's digitalization of the Monier-Williams at Kln University, turned into an XML databank by Jim Funderburk, and finally adapted to the HTML Heritage look and feel by Pawan Goyal. The Sanskrit Heritage dictionary is thus mirrored in the Monier-Williams, which allows compatibility of the grammatical tools.The choice of the dictionary is set to a default by the configuration of the server site. But each dictionary is accessible separately by its search page, respectivelySanskrit HeritageandMonier-Williams.This site offers a number of linguistic services for the Sanskrit language, such as aSanskrit Readerthat parses Sanskrit transliterated text into Sanskrit banks of tagged hypertext. Various phonological and morphological tools are also provided, as explained below.Sanskrit Heritage dictionary in book formYou may download the pdf file of the Heritage dictionary fromPDF. This document is readable through Acrobat Reader, a well-known document management software from Adobe freely available on Internet. Since the document is rather large, you have to account for some delay in loading its 4.5 Mb. This is an on-going effort, lexical acquisition implies quick obsolescense of this document which grows with versions.The Sanskrit Heritage dictionary is also available in an ebook format, usable with the Babyloo, Stardict or Goldendict software. Please visit theGolden Sanskrit Heritagepage.Multilingual hyper-text dictionaryInteractive browsingThe dictionary may be accessed through an indexing engine:Sanskrit Heritageor through its mirrorMonier-Williams.Your browser must be HTML5 compliant, and for proper viewing of Sanskrit text you must have installed on your system open type fonts for roman transliteration with diacritics, and for devangar. For instance, install fonts IndUni, available fromJohn Smith's site. A Unicode-compliant font for devangar with proper ligatures is Apple's Devanagari MT for Macintosh OS X stations. For Windows users, installation of font 'Arial MS Unicode' is advised for proper rendering.You may have to fiddle with the controls of your browser, so that the font declarations from the dictionary pages get precedence over the standard selection, and thus encoding is specified as Unicode compliant (UTF-8 encoding).Note that many words are given with their etymology as hypertext links. You may thus navigate from a word to its components, down to its roots. Also, the gender declarations of the main entries are mouse-sensitive, and give you direct access to the relevant declension table. Similarly, the present class mark of the verbal roots gives access to the conjugation schemes. Also for verb entries, preverbs lead you to the correspondingly prefixed derived verbs.All these grammatical tools, originally developed for the Heritage dictionary, are being progressiveley extended to the Monier-Williams dictionary. Thus our HTML Monier-Williams is linked with the Heritage declension engine for substantival entries.Sanskrit made easyIf you want to search for a Sanskrit word without knowing its exact transliteration, go to section "Sanskrit made easy" of the index page, which allows you to search for words without knowing precise diacritics usage. For instance, search Vishnou, Siva, or the grammarian Panini. This interface is limited for the moment to the Sanskrit Heritage dictionary.Sanskrit Grammarian

This interface gives the declension tables for Sanskrit substantives. Try out thisdeclension engineby submitting Sanskrit stems with intended gender. The same transliteration conventions as for the dictionary index apply. For instance, submit "deva" with gender Mas, or "devii" with gender Fem, or "brahman" with gender Neu. The fourth button, labeled "Any", may be used for the words which take their gender from the context, such as deictic pronouns ("aham", "tvad"), or numeral words such as "dva", "tri", etc.A conjugation engine for roots is also available. It handles the full present system: present indicative, imperfect, imperative and optative, as well as the passive present, the perfect, the aorist and the future. Participial stems, absolutives and infinitives are listed as well. Some secondary conjugations (causative, intensive, desiderative) are also generated, for the full present and future systems. Try out thisconjugation enginewith data such as "bhuu" 1, "as" 2, "m.rj" 2, "han" 2, "haa" 3, "hu" 3, "daa" 4, "su" 5, "p.r" 6, "yuj" 7, "k.r" 8, "j~naa" 9, "namas" 10. In order to get the secondary conjugations of a root, enter code 0. You may cascade by generating declensions of the generated participial stems.A word of caution is called for here. The only safe way to get correct inflected forms is to enter the stem and its morphological parameters consistently with their specification in the Heritage dictionary. This is specially true of roots, since thay appear with various names according to various Sanskrit grammars. For instance, root h is called h, hv or hve according to various grammarians. Another problem is homophony. When two items have the same phonetic realisation, their respective lexemes are disambiguated by an integer index, which is specific to the lexicon. Thus there are three roots named m in the Sanskrit Heritage dictionary. They are adressed respectively (in SH transliteration) as maa#1, maa#3 and maa#4. If you ask for the conjugated forms of maa in present classes 2 or 3, the system will guess you mean maa#1 (to measure). But if you mean maa#3 (to mow) or maa#4 (to exchange) you have to enter explicitly their stems maa#3 or maa#4. Entering an arbitrary stem and arbitrary morphology parameters may yield random results or error messages.LemmatizerConversely, alemmatiserattempts to tag inflected words. Try for instance (in Velthuis transliteration format) "devaat", "jagmivaan", "a.s.tau" (clicking on Noun) or "apibat", "akaar.siit", "dudoha", "vaahyate" etc (clicking on Verb). This lemmatizer knows about inflected forms of derived stems in some secondary derivations. For instance, "darzayi.syati" is found as conjugated form: { ca. fut. a. sg. 3 }[d_1], "dariid.rzyate" yields { int. pr. m. sg. 3 }[d_1], "did.rk.sate" yields { des. pr. m. sg. 3 }[d_1] and "bibhik.se" yields { des. pft. m. sg. 3 | des. pft. m. sg. 1 }[bhaj].N.B. Do not attempt to lemmatize verbal forms with preverbs - this will not work, it knows only how to invert root forms. Lemmatizing more complex forms is possible through the Sanskrit Reader interface, as we shall see below.MorphologyA dictionary of inflected forms of Sanskrit words is provided in XML form under various transliteration schemes. Please visit theSanskrit linguistic resources site.Sanskrit ReaderTry our interactiveSanskrit Reader. It is able to segment simple sentences. Try for instance to segment "tryambaka.myajaamahesugandhi.mpu.s.tivardhanam" (we assume Velthuis transliteration here). Then push the "Tagging" button and get the fully tagged sentence. You will see two segmentations, one with an identified compound form "tri-ambakam", the second with a compounded segment "tryambakam". Note that each segment is indicated with a lemma giving its stem and the set of morphological parameters that may generate the segment form from its stem. The stem is hyperlinked to the dictionary of choice.Note also that segments are separated by phonological information in the shape of a sandhi rule, justifying correct obtention of the original sentence by successive sandhi application. For instance, solution 1 explains the compound "tryambakam" as the sandhi of segments "tri" and "ambakam" by rule i|aya.The reader may be helped by inserting blanks in the input at word junction. For instance, the above mantra may be entered as "tryambaka.m yajaamahe sugandhi.m pu.s.tivardhanam". But compounds should stay in one piece. Spaces are also needed for hiatus, in sentences such as: "tacchrutvaasa~njaya uvaaca".Many options are provided in the menu of the Reader page. For instance, clicking on the Unsandhied button we may present text inpadaphaform, where each chunk is in terminal sandhi form. For instance "tryambakam yajaamahe sugandhim pu.s.tivardhanam".Two strengths of the Reader are provided. The Simplified mode, offered as a default, does not recognize vocatives. The Complete mode is more powerful, using the full range of participles of verbs, privative compounds, etc. It may however return so many solutions that listing all solutions is impractical, and other facilities must be used.The grammar used to recognize sentences is explained as a local automaton state transition graphLexer automaton. This is actually a simplification of the segmenter automaton control. A simpler one, close to the Simplified mode of the reader, isSimplified automaton. A fuller one, close to the Complete mode of the reader, isComplete automaton. The color codes of these diagrams explain the output conventions of the tags.In these diagrams, transparent nodes are non generative, and colored nodes correspond to the lexical categories recognized by the lemmatizer. The category Auxi is the subset of Verb consisting of conjugated forms of roots "k.r", "as" and "bhuu" used as auxiliaries in periphrastic constructions.Pv denotes sequences of preverbs.Sanskrit ParserIf in the reader you press the "Parsing" button, many irrelevant pseudo-solutions are eliminated. Try for instance example "pratilekhanenaak.saraa.nisundaraa.nibhavanti". In Simplified mode, it shows 80 potential segmentation solutions, but the parser keeps only 1.Each solution returned with the parser is marked with a green check sign, which may be pressed to get the semantic analysis of the sentence in terms of roles (kraka).The parser recognizes sentences. It may be made to recognize nominal phrases, provided one presses the "Contextual topic" button with the intended gender. You may for instance analyze the compound: "pravaran.rpamuku.tama.nimariicima~njariicayacarcitacara.nayugala.h" as a masculine nominal. Alternatively, one can ask to recognize this form as a single word, by pressing "Word" rather than the default "Sentence" text category. When breaking the text with spaces, the Word mode allows to recognize texts given inpadaphafashion. It is also possible to recognize sequences of chunks in final sandhi form separated by spaces, where sandhi will be assumed to be undone between the chunks, by specifying the "Unsandhied" mode in the reader interface.Sanskrit TaggerThe semantic analysis may be still ambiguous, since a given segment may be decorated by several morphological categories. All interpretations are presented under the role matrix, sorted by increasing penalty. Check for your favorite interpretation in this list, and select it by clicking on its green heart symbol. The system will return the corresponding unambiguously tagged sentence, as a page which you may save on your own station. Iterating this process allows you to progressively tag a Sanskrit text with the Sanskrit reader assistance.Alternatively, you may select the ambiguous morphology choices, each being provided with a selection button. Selections are chosen by default at the first choice, but you may override this default and choose manually e.g. the genders of nominals. When your choice is finalized, just click on the "Submit" button and you will get the corresponding deterministically tagged sentence. This tool is useful for semi-manual corpus annotation.Summary modeNow that you are more familiar with using the various modes of the Reader on small Sanskrit sentences, it is time to try to analyse more complex sentences. Obviously the listing of all solutions is out of the question with long sentences in Complete mode. A new visual interface is offered for semi-automatic segmentation. This new Summary mode is actually now proposed as a default in the Reader page.Try for instance "satya.mbruuyaatpriya.mbruuyaannabruuyaatsatyamapriya.mpriya.mcanaan.rtambruuyaade.sadharma.h sanaatana.h". The display presents a summary of the union of all solutions, as a chart of segments aligned on their respective input contribution. You see at the right end the segmentsantanasproposed first, on top of a forest of smaller words combinations. Click on the green check sign below it. The check sign becomes blue, and the forest of irrelevant combinations vanishes. Do the same under the satyam segments, then under apriyam, all segments presented as top candidates. Now choose the particle ca (and thus na). Now only one choice remains, between bryt and brym. Clicking on the first one will finish the job. Indeed only one solution remains, as may be checked by clicking on the "Show All Solutions" check sign, which may be invoked at any point on the process. You are now viewing the same output as given by the Reader in Tagging mode, but constrained to use only segments checked in the Summary. You may alternatively check the "Show Preferred Solutions" check sign, asking the Parser to further filter according to its system of penalties. If you make a mistake in the selection of segments, it is easy to backtrack using the "Undo" button.Other Sanskrit ResourcesWe have on on-going cooperation with the Department of Sanskrit Studies of the University of Hyderabad and the Computer Science Department of the Indian Institute of Technology at Kharagpur on computational linguistics for Sanskrit. A joint research team has been formed, cooperating with scholars from the Sanskrit Library. This team is actively developing cooperating multi-platform Web services.In october 2007 we organized the First International Sanskrit Computational Linguistics Symposium. Please visit theSymposium Site. This was followed by the Second Symposium in may 2008 atBrown University, by a third one in january 2009 atHyderabad University, a fourth one in december 2010 atJNU. a fifth one in january 2013 atIIT Bombay.

The Zen LibraryThis site reflects an ongoing project of Sanskrit processing on a comprehensive software platform. The project is based on a structured lexicographic database, compiled from the Sanskrit Heritage dictionary, and on the Zen computational linguistics toolkit. This toolkit is a library of programs implemented in Pidgin ML, functional core of theObjective Camlprogramming language. The Zen library and its documentation are available as free software under the Gnu Lesser General Public License (LGPL) from theZen site.The Sanskrit PortalPlease visit ourSanskrit Portalto find links to other Sanskrit resources.Artwork creditsOrissan artwork at this site courtesy of Shauraj Rath. Screenex, Bhubaneshwar, Ekamra, Orissa. All rights reserved.Wallpaper om images courtesy ofVishvarupa.com.Ganesh wallpaper courtesy ofFranois Patte.Shri Yantra design Grard Huet1990.

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