1960
DOI: 10.2307/595886
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Notes to Mayrhofer's Etymological Sanskrit Dictionary

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“…The sociolinguistic situation is complicated by the fact that the texts were transmitted orally for millennia. Because of the context of polygossia between the vernaculars spoken by the transmitters and the languages of the texts themselves, certain so-called Middle Indo-Aryanisms imposed themselves upon the language of even the oldest text, the Rig Veda (Tedesco 1945, 1960, Elizarenkova 1989; though see Kuiper 1991 for an opposing point of view). For instance, vocalization of r ˚, a tendency that is more or less complete by MIA times, is already observed in the Rig Veda (e.g., śithirá-'loose' < *śr ˚thirá-).…”
Section: Old Indo Aryan Periodmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The sociolinguistic situation is complicated by the fact that the texts were transmitted orally for millennia. Because of the context of polygossia between the vernaculars spoken by the transmitters and the languages of the texts themselves, certain so-called Middle Indo-Aryanisms imposed themselves upon the language of even the oldest text, the Rig Veda (Tedesco 1945, 1960, Elizarenkova 1989; though see Kuiper 1991 for an opposing point of view). For instance, vocalization of r ˚, a tendency that is more or less complete by MIA times, is already observed in the Rig Veda (e.g., śithirá-'loose' < *śr ˚thirá-).…”
Section: Old Indo Aryan Periodmentioning
confidence: 99%