From pbilmo at AU.OZ.DEAKIN Thu Jul 4 06:11:44 1991 From: pbilmo at AU.OZ.DEAKIN (Purusottama Bilimoria) Date: Thu, 04 Jul 91 16:11:44 +1000 Subject: mailing list Message-ID: <161227015071.23782.12969188166510871159.generated@prod2.harmonylists.io> I would like to be on the mailing list as the co-organiser of the next international world sanskrit conference in australia in 1994; I thought we should be in touch. Please confirm. pbilmo at deakin.oz.au From hvshah at EDU.MTU Fri Jul 5 03:18:54 1991 From: hvshah at EDU.MTU (Shah) Date: Thu, 04 Jul 91 23:18:54 -0400 Subject: mailing list Message-ID: <161227015075.23782.1604306756888968660.generated@prod2.harmonylists.io> I am not sure how I can help. I am not in touch with Sanskrit. Hiren From ucgadkw at UK.AC.UCL Fri Jul 5 08:45:52 1991 From: ucgadkw at UK.AC.UCL (Dominik Wujastyk) Date: Fri, 05 Jul 91 09:45:52 +0100 Subject: mailing list Message-ID: <161227015076.23782.321436088863539192.generated@prod2.harmonylists.io> Dear Purushottama (and group), Delighted to have you on board. This forum is an ideal one for early publicity about the forthcoming Australian World Sanskrit Conference. You can announce things here, and about 50 indologists will know immediately, and be able to tell others informally. You could also use this group for sounding out opinion about dates, sessions, or whatever. (If your really want to: a bit of autocracy in organizing conferences can sometimes be a good thing.) Another idea: other groups I know of distribute conference posters or leaflets via groups like Indology. The way to do it is to format your document using TeX or LaTeX, or some other generic system using only 7-bit character codes, so that we can download, format and print. PostScript would be another possibility, although it can be rather verbose. Dominik ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Dr Dominik Wujastyk, | Janet: D.Wujastyk at uk.ac.ucl Wellcome Institute for | Bitnet/Earn/Ean/Uucp/Internet: D.Wujastyk at ucl.ac.uk the History of Medicine,| or: dow at harvunxw.bitnet or: dow at wjh12.harvard.edu 183 Euston Road, | last resort: D.Wujastyk%uk.ac.ucl at nsfnet-relay.ac.uk London NW1 2BN, England. | Phone no.: +44 71 383-4252 ext.24 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- From ROSTEN_AJ at NZ.AC.USP Fri Jul 5 00:28:00 1991 From: ROSTEN_AJ at NZ.AC.USP (alan) Date: Fri, 05 Jul 91 12:28:00 +1200 Subject: signoff Message-ID: <161227015073.23782.13896337771227167427.generated@prod2.harmonylists.io> To List subscribers - I enclose copies of certain communications received by users of the vax maintained by The Computer Centre, University of the South Pacific, Suva.Fiji. I have sent them prior to unsubscribing through the appropriate listserver. Perhaps some member has had experience of similar problems and may be able to provide information of how the problem was solved - and hopefully may know of some source of funding that could be approached. If anyone would wish to reply it may be wise to reply directly to me since communications with the list would probably be shut down by then. -I- INTERNATIONAL COMPUTER COMMUNICATIONS FROM USP 1. INTRODUCTION In mos countries, Universities and research institutes, etc, are linked to national and international networks through permanent, fixed connections. Typically these connections are funded centrally, for example through a consortium of universities, or a national research body. This means that the connection is available free at the time of use, and to a very large extent, the cost is independent of the volume of traffic. At USP the situation is entirely different. The cost of a fixed connection (leased line) to the international networks would be about $FJ 120 000 per year, and it has not been possible to fund this. To provide some form of communication, a dial-up email relay service via the University of Waikato was introduced in June 1990. This means that the service is not free at the time of use, and that the cost is proportional to the volume of traffic. Another important difference to bear in mind is that with a fixed connection, other useful services become practical. Examples are file transfer and on-line access to remote systems and databases. 2. EMAIL AT USP These forms of communication, and especially email, are an essential part of modern academic life and should be considered essential at USP, perhaps even more so because of our isolated geographical location. Their value can be gauged from the way in which the usage of the email service has increased since its introduction. After the initial months where volumes were low, the approximate figures are as follows: Month Mbytes transferred Nov 90 3.2 Dec 90 2.8 Jan 91 5.8 Feb 91 6.4 Mar 91 8.6 Apr 91 17.1 Although it is heartening to see this increase, the associated costs have become unacceptable. The cost for the April traffic was over $FJ 6 000. At the time of writing, the projected cost of the June traffic will be over $FJ 7000. Because of the delay in receipt of bills from P & T, this recent dramatic increase has only recently come to light. The Computer Centre has immediately put in motion steps to investigate the type of traffic, and to monitor usage more closely and currently, recognising the immediate need to reduce costs. The following information related for usage for June up to 26th. (i) A total of 74 staff members have used international email (ii) The top two users account for 40% of the total traffic. (iii) The top ten users account for 84% of the total traffic. This pattern of usage is not surprising. More significant from the cost saving point of view is the following: (iv) At least 90% of the traffic consists of incoming messages from list servers, bulletin boards and similar services. Most of these services are of great value to specific subject areas. For example, the INFO-VAX service is invaluable in distributing information about problems and developments in the VMS community. There are some services however, which cater more for leisure interests, such as Science Fiction and latest film releases. Some are moderated, while others are not and can contain large amounts of 'junk mail'. It was initially thought that considerable savings could be made by avoiding multiple subscriptions to the same service. However, further investigation has indicated that the services themselves detect multiple registrations from the same site, and send a single copy for distribution, so this saving is not available. The above analysis leads reluctantly to the following conclusions and proposals. (i) At present the cost of service is escalating out of control and it cannot be sustained in its present form. (ii) The only way to bring costs under control is to remove the use of list servers and bulletin boards entirely. This would suggest a likely cost of around $FJ 600 per month. The Computer Centre has already cancelled its registration with INFO-VAX. If departments considered access to a service to be essential, a means might be found to cost this so that it could be charged. This is difficult, as it is not possible to predict the amount of traffic which will be received. 3. DIRECT ACCESS TO REMOTE SYSTEMS For direct on-line access to remote systems and data-bases, direct dial-up if often possible, as an alternative to network access which is not available from USP. This could be done in a controlled way via a modem connected to the VAX cluster, or from individual modems connected to PC's, using ISD telephone lines located in departments. This service has not been considered by the Computer Centre due again to its likely very high and uncontrolled costs. Consideration should also be given to the cost implications and control of individual, direct use of such services. 4. FUTURE PRIORITIES The above sections discuss immediate solutions to serious problem but should only be regarded as temporary measures. If USP us to function fully as a top rank University, it is essential to restore and improve the international communications facilities. Various avenues are currently being pursued, with the objective of being able to provide the type of fixed connection described in section 1. This is the only option which will provide the facilities which USP requires. Such connectivity has also to be seen in the context of the internal regional communication needs of the university. -II- Log in message appearing 5th July,1991 Due to the cost of the service and the unavailability of funds, the Computer Services Committee has reluctantly decided that subscriptions to e-mail journals, bulletin boards etc cannot be currently supported. Will anyone who has registered with any such services please cancel their registration immediately. It is hoped that this move will be temporary, while alternative arrangements are sought. Computing Centre Director. We are indeed blessed in our Computer Services Committee Alan Rosten a.j.rosten at usp.ac.nz From STUART at UK.AC.OXFORD.VAX Mon Jul 8 09:17:00 1991 From: STUART at UK.AC.OXFORD.VAX (STUART at UK.AC.OXFORD.VAX) Date: Mon, 08 Jul 91 09:17:00 +0000 Subject: IBM fonts Message-ID: <161227015078.23782.15783206769708276326.generated@prod2.harmonylists.io> Dear All, my apologies in advance for raising an issue which has perhaps appeared on this list numerous times. I have recently been asked by Christopher Lamb at Middlesex Polytechnic if I know of any Sanskrit fonts/diacritics based on Windows or Chiwriter. If anyone has any information could they please contact me as below, thanks in advance, Stuart Lee Research Officer CTI Centre for Textual Studies Oxford University Computing Service 13 Banbury Road Oxford OX2 6NN STUART at UK.AC.OX.VAX From ZYSK at EDU.NYU.ACFCLUSTER Mon Jul 8 16:19:00 1991 From: ZYSK at EDU.NYU.ACFCLUSTER (ZYSK at EDU.NYU.ACFCLUSTER) Date: Mon, 08 Jul 91 11:19:00 -0500 Subject: IBM fonts Message-ID: <161227015079.23782.644096832236177199.generated@prod2.harmonylists.io> I know of Sanskrit fonts for Chiwriter. The entire set up can be obtained from Madhav Deshpande, who is an subscriber to this forum. He will provide you with all the information you require. K G Zysk From BANKS at UK.AC.OXFORD.VAX Tue Jul 9 17:05:00 1991 From: BANKS at UK.AC.OXFORD.VAX (BANKS at UK.AC.OXFORD.VAX) Date: Tue, 09 Jul 91 17:05:00 +0000 Subject: IBM fonts Message-ID: <161227015081.23782.11056587173940870683.generated@prod2.harmonylists.io> I am posting a message I sent directly to Stuart Lee in case it's of any use to anyone else: "Stuart, I saw David Gellner just now and he told me that he uses a specially modified version of Chiwriter. The modifications were done by Gunthart Muller (I hope I've spelled that right). It writes in Roman, Roman- with-diacritics (for transliteration) and Davanagari (modified for Newari). Gunthart has apparently produced versions for all major S Asian languages (Bengali, Gujarati, Tamil etc.). According to DG he was also planning a version which allowed one to write in Roman/diacritic, push a button and have the whole lot transposed into Devanagari. Gunthart was in Oxford (Merton? Balliol?) but is now in Germany. The best I can come up with is a phone number: (010 49) 71 21 42 886. This is his office - according to DG the secretary doesn't speak much English but is used to people requesting Gunthart from the English-speaking world!" I can't vouch for the accuracy of any of this (being a Macintosh-user, where these things are simpler), but if there are any problems I can go back to David Gellner (who isn't on this list) and try and find out more. David remembers paying just over L100 (direct from Gunthart) a couple of years ago. Marcus Banks ISCA, Oxford From MORPURGO at UK.AC.OXFORD.VAX Tue Jul 9 18:39:00 1991 From: MORPURGO at UK.AC.OXFORD.VAX (ANNA MORPURGO DAVIES) Date: Tue, 09 Jul 91 18:39:00 +0000 Subject: IBM fonts Message-ID: <161227015082.23782.10636283142927081410.generated@prod2.harmonylists.io> A propos of Chiwriter and Skt fonts. Gunthard Mueller now runs a firm called Horstmann and Mueller Software GmbH, Kaiserstrasse 79, D=7410 Reutlingen, Germany. Telephone (0)7121-42886 or (0)7121-42829. The title of the firm is accompanied by "Zentrale fuer ChiWriter Software in Deutschland, Oesterreich und der Schweiz". One should be able to ask for the fonts writing or telephoning. Anna Morpurgo Davies From D87 at EARN.DHDURZ1 Thu Jul 18 17:12:34 1991 From: D87 at EARN.DHDURZ1 (Thomas Malten) Date: Thu, 18 Jul 91 17:12:34 +0000 Subject: subscription Message-ID: <161227015084.23782.15979509881156533025.generated@prod2.harmonylists.io> can please someone tell me how to subscribe to the indology list through bitnet? malten From ucgadkw at UK.AC.UCL Tue Jul 30 13:24:14 1991 From: ucgadkw at UK.AC.UCL (Dominik Wujastyk) Date: Tue, 30 Jul 91 14:24:14 +0100 Subject: Jaisalmer Manuscripts Message-ID: <161227015086.23782.9163408210384333174.generated@prod2.harmonylists.io> As INDOLOGISTs may recall, I wrote to Mr Joharimal Parakh, the gentleman mentioned in the Motilal news item as a contact person for gaining access to the Jaisalmer MS collection. He wrote back promptly, and a very friendly letter it was. The main points: 1. "As to copies of MSS themselves, final decision will be taken in the general body meeting of the [Jaisalmer Jnana Bhandar] trust on 29th August. Till then you will have to bear with us. We shall let you know the outcome then." 2. Mr Parakh has catalogued a further 4,500 MSS in the Jaisalmer Jnana Bhandar that did not appear in Punyavijayaji's catalogue. Parakh's catalogue is called "part II" of Punyavijayaji's, and is available for 200 Rs plus postage. 3. He (or his team, he keeps saying "we" and "us") has also done a Catalogue of Jodhpur Bhandars, which is also for sale at 300 Rs. + p&p. It covers 8000 MSS in tabular form. A second volume containing colophons is planned. 4. He also alludes to 3 tabular catalogues of Jaisalmer, Jodhpur and Barmer in a context that doesn't make it clear whether these are different from those mentioned above. I have written back, and await the decision of 29th August with bated breath. Dominik From ucgadkw at UK.AC.UCL Tue Jul 30 13:42:43 1991 From: ucgadkw at UK.AC.UCL (Dominik Wujastyk) Date: Tue, 30 Jul 91 14:42:43 +0100 Subject: MS lists available Message-ID: <161227015088.23782.288524585294873576.generated@prod2.harmonylists.io> In April this year, I toured some of the Sanskrit MS libraries in Saurashtra. In particular I visited Gondal and Jamnagar. For Sanskrit MS afficionados, I have about five photocopies each of: 1. The catalogue of the MSS from the Shri Bhuvaneshwari Pith, Gondal. (Number 102 in Janert's Annotated Bibliography of the Catalogues of Indian Manuscripts). The Gondal collection is about 8000 MSS, and in the 1970s it was sold to Gujarat State, and deposited at Gujarat Ayurveda Univ., Jamnagar. The collection can be seen there on Mondays only. The librarian in charge is a Mr Shilu, who works in Junagadh for the rest of the week. Anyone going to Jamnagar for Sanskritic purposes should make contact with Kaviraja Hari Sankara Sarma, Dean of Post Graduate Teaching and Research at GAU. He is a delightful man, most helpful, and a real live wire. 2. A rough listing of all (?) the MSS in the library of Gujarat Ayurveda University, Jamnagar. This typed list is mainly in Gujarati script, but partly in Devanagari too. This list covers the Gondal collection plus quite a lot more (several hundred at least). If you want either or both of these, let me know. I am interested in any information that INDOLOGISTs might have about the publishing activities of Jivaram Kalidas Shastri, who was Rajavaidya to the Maharaja of Gondal from about 1920 to about 1970. J. K. Shastri (the father of Acharyashree Ghanashyamjee, the present owner and priest of the Bhuvaneshwari pith, Gondal) published lots of books, and I am specially interested in his edition of the Rasendramangala, apparently published in 1924. I have only seen footnote references to this work. Anyone got it? For reasons I went into in an article in Ambix in 1984, I don't believe this is actually the Rasendramangala; most likely it is Nityanatha's Rasaratnakara, or a part of it. But I want to check. Dominik From LYAA101 at EARN.UTXVM Tue Jul 30 17:40:35 1991 From: LYAA101 at EARN.UTXVM (LYAA101 at EARN.UTXVM) Date: Tue, 30 Jul 91 17:40:35 +0000 Subject: MS lists available Message-ID: <161227015090.23782.6799761386166095031.generated@prod2.harmonylists.io> In-Reply-To: The letter of Tuesday, 30 July 1991 9:10am CT Dominik: Please send me copies of your mss. lists for the UT Library. Thanks. Merry Burlingham From FO90030%bitnet.DHHUNI4 at EDU.CUNY.CUNYVM Wed Jul 31 17:22:41 1991 From: FO90030%bitnet.DHHUNI4 at EDU.CUNY.CUNYVM (FO90030) Date: Wed, 31 Jul 91 17:22:41 +0000 Subject: None Message-ID: <161227015092.23782.15142550627033394495.generated@prod2.harmonylists.io> To all Indologists: As far as I know no bibliography of the writings of the late Thomas Burrow, Boden Professor of Sanskrit at Oxford, has been published. I have started putting together a list based on offprints he sent me and books in my own collection. If any of you could help by adding to the following list or making improvements to it, I would be grateful. Bibliography of Thomas Burrow: Books and articles 1934 `Iranian words in the Kharo.s.thi documents from Chinese Turkestan', BSOS, VII.3, 1934, 510-516 1935 `Iranian words in the Kharo.s.thi documents from Chinese Turkestan - II', BSOS, VII.4, 1935, 779-790. `Tocharian elements in Kharo.s.thi documents', JRAS, 1935, 667- 1936 `The dialectical position of the Niya Prakrit', BSOS, VIII, 1936, 419- 1937 - The language of the Kharo.s.thi documents from Chinese Turkestan, Cambridge 1937. `Further Kharo.s.thi documents from Niya', BSOS, IX.1, 1937, 111-124. 1938 `Dravidian studies I', BSOS, IX.3, 711-722. 1940 - A translation of the Kharo.s.thi documents from Chinese Turkestan, London 1940. `Dravidian studies II', BSOS, X.2, 1940, 289-297. 1943 `Dravidian studies III', BSOAS, XI.1, 1943, 122-139. 1944 `Dravidian studies IV', BSOAS, XI.2, 1943, 328-356. 1945 `Some Dravidian words in Sanskrit', TPS, 1945, 79-120. `Dravidian studies V', BSOAS, XI.3, 1945, 595-616. 1946 `Loanwords in Sanskrit', TPS, 1946, 1-30. 1947 `Dravidian studies VI', BSOAS, XII.1, 1947, 132-147. 1948 `Dravidian studies VII', BSOAS, XII.2, 1948, 365-396. `Sanskrit r'ajas', BSOAS, XII.3-4, 1948, 645-651. 1949 `"Shwa" in Sanskrit', TPS, 1949, 22-61. 1952 `Some remarks on the formation of nouns in Sanskrit', Annals of the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute, 32, 1952, 19-33. 1953 - The Parji language: a Dravidian language of Bastar (with S. Bhattacharya), Hertford 1953. 1954 `The Sanskrit precative', pp. 34-42 in: Asiatica, Festschrift Friedrich Weller, Leipzig 1954. 1955 - The Sanskrit language, London 1955 (repr. 1959). `Sanskrit kava- and related words', Indian Linguistics, 16, 1955, 187-193. Vedic i.s- "to prosper"', BSOAS, XVII.2, 1955, 326-345. 1956 `Sanskrit g]-/gur- "to welcome"', BSOAS, XX, 1957, 133-144. `Sanskrit lubh- "to disturb"', JRAS, 1956, 191-200. `The meaning of the Vedic word gho.s'ad', JAOS, 76, 1956, 185-186. 1957 `An archaic verbal termination in early Indo-Aryan', IIJ, 1, 1957, 61-76. `Sanskrit lexicological notes', pp. 3-11 in: Felicitation volume presented to Professor Sripad Krishna Belvalkar, ed. S. Radhakrishnan et al., Banaras 1957. `Nirvacanaani', Annals of Oriental Research, 13, 1957, 2-13. 1959 `On the phonological history of Sanskrit k.sam- "earth", .rk.sa- "bear", a nd lik.saa- "nit"', JAOS, 79, 1959, 85-90. `Sanskrit k.si-: Gk. phthino', JAOS, 79, 1959, 255-262. 1960 - A Dravidian etymological dictionary (with M.B. Emeneau), Oxford 1960. `A comparative vocabulary of the Gondi dialects', JAS, 2, 1960, 73-251. `Sanskrit krand- "step, stride"', Bulletin of the Deccan College, 20, 1960 , 281-287. 1961 `Some notes on the Kui dialect as spoken by the Ku]]ia Kandhs of North-east Koraput' (with S. Bhattacharya), IIJ, 5, 1961, 118-135. `A note on the etymology of Sanskrit karmaara- "smith"', ALB, 25, 1961, 69-77. 1962 `Gadba supplement' (with S. Bhattacharya), IIJ, 6, 1962, 45-51. `Sanskrit aamoda- "fragrance, perfume"', pp. 23-27 in: Indological studies in honor of W. Norman Brown, ed. E. Bender, New Haven 1962. 1963 `Notes on Kuvi with a short vocabulary', IIJ, 6, 1963, 231-289. `On the significance of the term arma-, armaka- in early Sanskrit literature', Journal of Indian history, 41, 1963, 159-166. 1968 - A Dravidian etymological dictionary: Supplement (with M.B. Emeneau), Oxford 1968. `Sanskrit plak.s.noti', pp. 247-252 in Pratid]nam: Indian, Iranian and Ind o- European studies presented to Franciscus Bernardus Jacobus Kuiper on his sixtieth birthday, ed. J.C. Heesterman, G.H. Schokker, and V.I. Subramo- niam, The Hague 1968. 1969 `Sanskrit', pp. 3-35 in Current trends in linguistics 5, Linguistics in So uth Asia, ed. T.A. Sebeok, The Hague 1969. 1970 `Notes on some rare words in Sanskrit and their etymology', BSOAS, XXXIII.1, 1970, 46-54. 1971 `Spontaneous cerebrals in Sanskrit', BSOAS, XXXIV.3, 1971, 538-559. 1972 `A reconsideration of Fortunatov's law', BSOAS, XXXV.3, 1972, 531-545. 1973 - The Sanskrit language, 2nd ed., London 1973. `The Proto-Indoaryans', JRAS, 1973, 123-140. 1975 `A new look at Brugmann's law', BSOAS, XXXVIII.1, 1975, 55-80. 1976 `Sanskrit words having dental -s- after i, u, and r', Studies in Greek, Italic, and Indo-European linguistics offered to Leonard R. Palmer, ed. A. Morpurgo Davies and W. Meid, Innsbruck 1976, 33-41. 1979 The problem of shwa in Sanskrit, Oxford 1979. 1980 `Sanskrit maa- "to make, produce, create"', BSOAS, XLIII.2, 1980, 311-328. `Sanskrit maa- "to ascertain"', TPS, 1980, 134-140. 1981 `Sanskrit maa- "to approach, meet, join; (trans.) to bring to"', BSOAS, XLIV.1, 1981, 85-104. 1982 `Five notes on Sanskrit etymology', The Adyar Library Bulletin, 44-45, 198 2 436- 445. `On the derivation of the Sanskrit word nimitta', pp. 51-55 in Abhinandana - Bhaaratii: Professor Krishna Kanta Handiqui Felicitation Volume, Gauhati 1982. 1986 `The Vedic verb p'avate "goes, moves, (wind) blows, (Soma) flows', BSOAS, XLIX.2, 1986, 292-298. `Six notes on Sanskrit etymology', pp. 45-52 in S.K. De Memorial volume `Sanskrit matku.na- and utku.na-' 53-56 BSOAS, XLII.2, 1979 in honour of Thomas Burrow REE From FO90030%bitnet.DHHUNI4 at EDU.CUNY.CUNYVM Wed Jul 31 17:24:47 1991 From: FO90030%bitnet.DHHUNI4 at EDU.CUNY.CUNYVM (FO90030) Date: Wed, 31 Jul 91 17:24:47 +0000 Subject: None Message-ID: <161227015094.23782.3934386702490241630.generated@prod2.harmonylists.io> To all Indologists: As far as I know no bibliography of the writings of the late Thomas Burrow, Boden Professor of Sanskrit at Oxford, has been published. I have started putting together a list based on offprints he sent me and books in my own collection. If any of you could help by adding to the following list or making improvements to it, I would be grateful. Bibliography of Thomas Burrow: Books and articles 1934 `Iranian words in the Kharo.s.thi documents from Chinese Turkestan', BSOS, VII.3, 1934, 510-516 1935 `Iranian words in the Kharo.s.thi documents from Chinese Turkestan - II', BSOS, VII.4, 1935, 779-790. `Tocharian elements in Kharo.s.thi documents', JRAS, 1935, 667- 1936 `The dialectical position of the Niya Prakrit', BSOS, VIII, 1936, 419- 1937 - The language of the Kharo.s.thi documents from Chinese Turkestan, Cambridge 1937. `Further Kharo.s.thi documents from Niya', BSOS, IX.1, 1937, 111-124. 1938 `Dravidian studies I', BSOS, IX.3, 711-722. 1940 - A translation of the Kharo.s.thi documents from Chinese Turkestan, London 1940. `Dravidian studies II', BSOS, X.2, 1940, 289-297. 1943 `Dravidian studies III', BSOAS, XI.1, 1943, 122-139. 1944 `Dravidian studies IV', BSOAS, XI.2, 1943, 328-356. 1945 `Some Dravidian words in Sanskrit', TPS, 1945, 79-120. `Dravidian studies V', BSOAS, XI.3, 1945, 595-616. 1946 `Loanwords in Sanskrit', TPS, 1946, 1-30. 1947 `Dravidian studies VI', BSOAS, XII.1, 1947, 132-147. 1948 `Dravidian studies VII', BSOAS, XII.2, 1948, 365-396. `Sanskrit r'ajas', BSOAS, XII.3-4, 1948, 645-651. 1949 `"Shwa" in Sanskrit', TPS, 1949, 22-61. 1952 `Some remarks on the formation of nouns in Sanskrit', Annals of the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute, 32, 1952, 19-33. 1953 - The Parji language: a Dravidian language of Bastar (with S. Bhattacharya), Hertford 1953. 1954 `The Sanskrit precative', pp. 34-42 in: Asiatica, Festschrift Friedrich Weller, Leipzig 1954. 1955 - The Sanskrit language, London 1955 (repr. 1959). `Sanskrit kava- and related words', Indian Linguistics, 16, 1955, 187-193. Vedic i.s- "to prosper"', BSOAS, XVII.2, 1955, 326-345. 1956 `Sanskrit g]-/gur- "to welcome"', BSOAS, XX, 1957, 133-144. `Sanskrit lubh- "to disturb"', JRAS, 1956, 191-200. `The meaning of the Vedic word gho.s'ad', JAOS, 76, 1956, 185-186. 1957 `An archaic verbal termination in early Indo-Aryan', IIJ, 1, 1957, 61-76. `Sanskrit lexicological notes', pp. 3-11 in: Felicitation volume presented to Professor Sripad Krishna Belvalkar, ed. S. Radhakrishnan et al., Banaras 1957. `Nirvacanaani', Annals of Oriental Research, 13, 1957, 2-13. 1959 `On the phonological history of Sanskrit k.sam- "earth", .rk.sa- "bear", a nd lik.saa- "nit"', JAOS, 79, 1959, 85-90. `Sanskrit k.si-: Gk. phthino', JAOS, 79, 1959, 255-262. 1960 - A Dravidian etymological dictionary (with M.B. Emeneau), Oxford 1960. `A comparative vocabulary of the Gondi dialects', JAS, 2, 1960, 73-251. `Sanskrit krand- "step, stride"', Bulletin of the Deccan College, 20, 1960 , 281-287. 1961 `Some notes on the Kui dialect as spoken by the Ku]]ia Kandhs of North-east Koraput' (with S. Bhattacharya), IIJ, 5, 1961, 118-135. `A note on the etymology of Sanskrit karmaara- "smith"', ALB, 25, 1961, 69-77. 1962 `Gadba supplement' (with S. Bhattacharya), IIJ, 6, 1962, 45-51. `Sanskrit aamoda- "fragrance, perfume"', pp. 23-27 in: Indological studies in honor of W. Norman Brown, ed. E. Bender, New Haven 1962. 1963 `Notes on Kuvi with a short vocabulary', IIJ, 6, 1963, 231-289. `On the significance of the term arma-, armaka- in early Sanskrit literature', Journal of Indian history, 41, 1963, 159-166. 1968 - A Dravidian etymological dictionary: Supplement (with M.B. Emeneau), Oxford 1968. `Sanskrit plak.s.noti', pp. 247-252 in Pratid]nam: Indian, Iranian and Ind o- European studies presented to Franciscus Bernardus Jacobus Kuiper on his sixtieth birthday, ed. J.C. Heesterman, G.H. Schokker, and V.I. Subramo- niam, The Hague 1968. 1969 `Sanskrit', pp. 3-35 in Current trends in linguistics 5, Linguistics in So uth Asia, ed. T.A. Sebeok, The Hague 1969. 1970 `Notes on some rare words in Sanskrit and their etymology', BSOAS, XXXIII.1, 1970, 46-54. 1971 `Spontaneous cerebrals in Sanskrit', BSOAS, XXXIV.3, 1971, 538-559. 1972 `A reconsideration of Fortunatov's law', BSOAS, XXXV.3, 1972, 531-545. 1973 - The Sanskrit language, 2nd ed., London 1973. `The Proto-Indoaryans', JRAS, 1973, 123-140. 1975 `A new look at Brugmann's law', BSOAS, XXXVIII.1, 1975, 55-80. 1976 `Sanskrit words having dental -s- after i, u, and r', Studies in Greek, Italic, and Indo-European linguistics offered to Leonard R. Palmer, ed. A. Morpurgo Davies and W. Meid, Innsbruck 1976, 33-41. 1979 The problem of shwa in Sanskrit, Oxford 1979. 1980 `Sanskrit maa- "to make, produce, create"', BSOAS, XLIII.2, 1980, 311-328. `Sanskrit maa- "to ascertain"', TPS, 1980, 134-140. 1981 `Sanskrit maa- "to approach, meet, join; (trans.) to bring to"', BSOAS, XLIV.1, 1981, 85-104. 1982 `Five notes on Sanskrit etymology', The Adyar Library Bulletin, 44-45, 198 2 436- 445. `On the derivation of the Sanskrit word nimitta', pp. 51-55 in Abhinandana - Bhaaratii: Professor Krishna Kanta Handiqui Felicitation Volume, Gauhati 1982. 1986 `The Vedic verb p'avate "goes, moves, (wind) blows, (Soma) flows', BSOAS, XLIX.2, 1986, 292-298. `Six notes on Sanskrit etymology', pp. 45-52 in S.K. De Memorial volume `Sanskrit matku.na- and utku.na-' 53-56 BSOAS, XLII.2, 1979 in honour of Thomas Burrow REE From MORPURGO at UK.AC.OXFORD.VAX Wed Jul 31 18:11:00 1991 From: MORPURGO at UK.AC.OXFORD.VAX (ANNA MORPURGO DAVIES) Date: Wed, 31 Jul 91 18:11:00 +0000 Subject: Bibliography of Burrow's writings Message-ID: <161227015096.23782.5667518204973527985.generated@prod2.harmonylists.io> A bibliography of Burrow's writings was compiled by G.R. Hart, E. Tucker and C.J. Wright and published in BSOAS 50 (1987), 350-357 in appendix to the obituary by G.R. Hart. Anna Morpurgo Davies