Murthy's Notes on the etymology of Sanskrit (Samskritam)

Murthy's Notes on the etymology of Sanskrit (Samskritam)
GENERAL NOTES:
1. I will create notes on the etymology of Samskritam (I will use "sanskrit" in my writing) made up of a series of lessonettes.
2. I have chosen to write in English alphabets only at this time, not using the dEvanaagari script, or other scripts of languages like Kannada, Telugu, Malayalam, Hindi, Marathi, Gujarati, Bengali, Punjabi etc.
3. Feel free to insert words and alphabets written in your favorite languages.
4. You will and should get credit for supplementing my lessonettes by adding words or texts in your favorite languages.
Note that I understand and have different levels of abilities in many of the Indian languages.
nru  person or people or citizens) + pa = nrupa
nru +pati = nrupati
nru --> nara
nara + pati = narapati
naara means refers to derived from or related to nara
BASICS:
In the sanskrit alphabets system, the vowels are:
a, aa (deergha); i, ee (deergha); u, oo (deergha); Ru (as in Rishi), Roo; e, E ai; o, O ou; am, aha.
NOTICE: There are two more alphabets after Ru and Roo that is not commonly taught in Sanskrit and all Indian languages. I will address them in a separate post.
NOTICE: na transforms to its deerha akshara version naa
In mahaabharata, arjuna is referred to as nara, the man;
krishNa (krushNa) is referred to as naaraayaNa
nara + simha = narasimha
GENERAL FORMULA: Transformations for:
refers to derived from or related to for other vowel alphabets or vyanjana alphabets:
a transforms to aa as in the following example:
dasharatha --> daashrathi (This transformed word refers to anything derived from or related to, however it refers to dasharatha king's son raama. However, in general, it could refer to all children of the king dasharatha including lakshmaNa, bharata and shatrughna. It may also be used to even a special elephant or horse that belongs to King dasharatha and especially he very proud of the royal pride animals.
rama --> raama
The root alphabet is ram, which is an am version of the vyanjana ra. ram means happiness, and few affiliated means like pleasure etc.
GENERAL BASICS:
The sanskrit language is a perfect object-oriented language in the world. The individual letter roots have very broad conceptual meaning and references, the perfect inclusion of all derivatives from the root letter. daughter or derivative object class from the ultimate basics root alphabets of sanskrit by the following:
1. Adding an alphabet before or after the root alphabet creates a derivative or daughter object class.
2. Transformations like daasharathi from dasharatha.
3. Combining two or more words using the rules of the sanskrit language grammatical rules or formulae.
the etymology for sanskrit words could be traced to a single alphabet in the alphabet system of sanskrit.

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