REET Level 2 study notes
Upasarga and Pratyaya in Sanskrit
An upasarga is one of 22 indeclinable prefixes (pra, parā, apa, sam, anu, ava, nis, nir, dus, dur, vi, ā, ni, adhi, api, ati, su, ut, abhi, prati, pari, upa) that attach before a dhātu and shift or intensify its meaning, as hṛ becomes āhṛ, vihṛ, saṃhṛ, prahṛ. A pratyaya is a suffix added to a dhātu (kṛt) or to a noun stem (taddhita) to build new words. For REET Level 2 Sanskrit teachers, the goal is to render the meaning-shift and the derivation step (sthiti to siddha-rūpa), not merely list forms.
Key points
- Classical grammar counts twenty-two upasargas (pra, parā, apa, sam, anu, ava, nis, nir, dus, dur, vi, ā, ni, adhi, api, ati, su, ut, abhi, prati, pari, upa).
- An upasarga before a dhātu forcibly redirects its meaning — the maxim upasargeṇa dhātvartho balād anyatra nīyate.
- One root, many words: hṛ becomes āhṛ (bring), vihṛ (wander), saṃhṛ (gather), prahṛ (strike).
- Kṛt pratyayas attach to a root: ktvā, lyap, tumun, śatṛ, śānac, kta, ktavatu, tavyat, anīyar, ṇvul, tṛc.
- Taddhita pratyayas attach to a noun stem: matup, in, tva, tal, ṣyañ, aṇ, ṭhak.
- Strī-pratyaya builds feminines: ṭāp gives long ā (ajā), ṅīp gives long ī (gaurī).
- With a prefix, ktvā becomes lyap — kṛtvā but ākṛtya, not āgamtvā.
- Common traps: literal split, upasarga–avyaya, kṛt–taddhita ending confusion, ktvā–lyap, ṭāp–ṅīp swap.
- Teach via prefix wheel, split-cards, derivation ladder and meaning-theatre at Class 6 to 8.
- Vygotsky scaffolding, Piaget concrete-operational stage, Bruner enactive-iconic-symbolic and Krashen comprehensible input frame the pedagogy.
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An upasarga is one of 22 indeclinable prefixes (pra, parā, apa, sam, anu, ava, nis, nir, dus, dur, vi, ā, ni, adhi, api, ati, su, ut, abhi, prati, pari, upa) that attach before a dhātu and shift or intensify its meaning, as hṛ becomes āhṛ, vihṛ, saṃhṛ, prahṛ. A pratyaya is a suffix added to a dhātu (kṛt) or to a noun stem (taddhita) to build new words. For REET Level 2 Sanskrit teachers, the goal is to render the...
