Dear Harry Spier,according to my limited knowledge, VÄjasaneyins pronounce(d) AnunÄsika before semi-vowels, sibilants and h as "á¹…g", represented in writing by a special sign (as in your edition): Å›ataṃ śṛṇuyÄma → "Å›ataá¹…g śṛṇuyÄma".Quite similar to how Germans - in the majority of cases - pronounce French nasalizations, e.g. "Kartong" for "carton"
However, the pronunciation when reciting SaṃhitÄ texts replaces the articulation of AnusvÄra with a spoken "guṃ". So "tÄ guṃ haitÄm ..." for tÄṃ haitÄm ..."Your symbol represents an AnusvÄra sign in a particular phonetic environment.Vedicists will know better.Best,WS_______________________________________________Am Di., 6. Okt. 2020 um 04:02 Uhr schrieb Harry Spier via INDOLOGY <indology@list.indology.info>:I pasted an image of a page in the text with the symbols but I've been informed off-list that it didn't showup so I'm attaching it.Thanks,Harry Spier_______________________________________________On Mon, Oct 5, 2020 at 5:39 PM Harry Spier <vasishtha.spier@gmail.com> wrote:First thank you to Lauren Bausch, Steven Lindquest for the information about the editions and Caley Smith who pointed me to Weber's edition on archive.org.I've just looked at the Weber's printed text . In the first line of the image from the text I've pasted below there are two symbols I don't understand and have highlighted in red. I've never seen the first. The second looks like avagraha but I'm not clear why it is where it is between long a and a.ÂÂHarry Spier
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