Page:The Sources of Standard English.djvu/32

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English in its Earliest Shape.
3

now print a hundred and thirty words or so, the oldest used by us, which vary but slightly in their Eastern and Western shapes. How the one-syllable roots first arose, no man can say.

Sanscrit. English (Old and New). Sanscrit. English (Old and New).
na ne, no dhruva (cer­tain) true
ana an, on
upa up mridu (soft) mild
upari over bhurja birch
abhi by nâbhi navel
apa of nakha nægel, nail
para far nava new
puras for ukshan (bull) ox
param fram, from cú, cow
antar under avi (ovis) ewe
adhi at mûsha mûs, mouse
ud ût, out hansa (goose) gander
nu nu, now udra water
sa, sâ, tat se, seô, þæt (the, that) swâdu sweet
swêda sweat
they rudhira red
sama (like) same anta end
ubhâ bâ, both yuga yoke
kas[1] hwâ, who laghu, laghis­tha light, lightest
kutra hwider, whither
tatra thither Divâ-madhyam Day-middle, noon
katara hwæðer, whe­ther
râjya rich
antara (onther) other vidjâ wit
mahistha mâest, most manas mind
dvau twâ, two gharmá warmth
tri þri, three nâman nama, name
sastha sixth lobha (desire) love
saptan seven agra (field) acre
navan nine hval (to move) hweol, wheel
trajôdasan thirteen sadas seat
yuvan young pathin path
  1. K in Sanscrit becomes H in a Teutonic tongue.