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Shiva and 'Ring around the Rosy'
Beggar's Opera and its Sanskrit Puns
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English Words You Speak from Sanskrit
The purpose of this webpage is to demonstrate the relationship between
Sanskrit and English. To simplify matters, I will be using root-words
and words in their purer forms. There will be no need to demonstrate
every inflected form of a word. Words placed in parentheses are those
English words derived from Sanskrit.
Sometimes, there will be mention of words from other intermediary
languages, serving as a demonstration of changes in spelling and
pronunciation.
Symbols used:
< "derived from"
> "resulting in" (a related word)
Note: In Sanskrit and classical Latin, v is sometimes
pronounced as w, while the opposite is true in German. In Slavic
languages, both letters are interchangeable.
D's and T's are interchangeable. Similarly, at times,
B=P=F=V.
A-/AN-, (prefix) "not, without=Eng. A-/AN- (APOLITICAL, AMORAL; ANOREXIC, "without appetite"). The prefix A- also ends up in Nahuatl (Aztec).
AD > Goth. root AT, pres. ITA (EAT, ATE)
AKSHA, "axle, axis" > Ger. ACHSE
AKSHI, "eye"=Russ. OKO=L. OCULUS=M.E. EYGHE, "eye". It is common for older English words spelled with a G to drop this letter and exchange it with a Y. (EYE; OCULAR; OCCULT, associated with the Evil Eye.)
AARYA, "people from Central Asia, noble, royal, master" (Aryan)
AASANA, "sitting" (ASANA, "a yoga posture")
AN*KA, "bend, curve, hook" > L. ANCORA (ANCHOR)
ANTA, "end"
ANTAR, "within, between, among; in the middle" (INTER-NATIONAL, INTERIOR). Akin to ANTARA, "interior, other". See I-TARA.
ANTI, "before" (ANTIPASTO, something eaten before the main course/pasta; ANTECEDENT, ANTERIOR). This is not the same as Eng. ANTI-, ""against".
AP/APAS, "work" > L. OPUS/OPERA (OPERATE)
ARD, "make agitated, torment, kill" > L. ARDERE/ARSI, "be violently enraged, passionate; (countries), be in turmoil, at war" (ARDENT, "strongly emotional about"; ARSON)
AS, "to be", akin to ASTI=L. EST=Ger. IST, "is". Cf. L. ESSE, "be", Eng. ESSENCE, ESSENTIAL.
ASHTA, "eight"=L. OCTO, Ger. ACHT (OCTAGON, OCTET, OCTOPUS)
-ATI/-ATE, a verb ending for the third person, singular, in the present tense. Cf. L. nuntiAT, facIT, docET. English has a cognate, as in "my cup runnETH over."
AUM/OM, the magical, repeated sound used in Yoga
BAAD/VAAD, "bathe" > Old High German BAD, "bath"
BANDH, "bind around" (BIND, BAND, BANDAGE)
BARBARA, "barbarian, one with long hair" (BARBER)
BHAN~J, "break" > L. FRANGERE/FREGI/FRACTUM > Ger. BRECHEN (BREAK, FRACTURE, FRAGILE)
BHRAATHRA, "brother, fraternity" > L. FRATER (BROTHERHOOD)
BHRI, "to bear, carry away, endure" > L. FERRE, "bear"; Old Irish BRITA, "birth" (BEARABLE, BIRTH, TRANSFER, INFER)
BHRUU, "brow"
BHUJ, "bend down" > Anglo-Saxon BUGAN (BOW)
BHUU, "be" > L. FUIT/FUTURUS, forms of esse, "be" (FUTURE)
BHUUTI, "wealth, fortune". Could this be related to Eng. BOOTY/BUTY, "anything plundered" [?]
BUDH, "awaken, communicate" (BUDDHA; BODHISATVA, "a saint, apostle"; BID < O.E. BUDON, "communicate")
More words below
C[H]AND, "shine, be bright" > L. CANDERE, "shine, be hot"; INCENDERE/INCENSUM, "burn, inflame emotions" (INCANDESCENT, CANDLE, CHANDELIER, INCENDIARY; INCENSED, "angry")
C[H]AKRA, "wheel", used to describe points of spiritual power.
CAR, "go, move, travel through, pervade" akin to CARYA, "driving in a carriage" (CAR, CHARIOT, CARRY)
CATUR< "four"=L. QUATTOR (QUARTER, "a fourth"; QUATERNARY, "in fours"; QUADRATE, "four-sided")
DA, akin to DATTA, "given" > L. DATA (DATA, "technical information"; DATE [pertaining to time]; DATIVE)
DAM, "tame"=L. DOMARE=O.E. TAM (INDOMITABLE)
DAMA "house"=L. DOMUS (DOMICILE, DOMESTICATE)
DANTA, "tooth" (DENTURE, INDENT)
DAARU, "wood" > Hindi DEODAAR < Skt. DEVA, "god" + DAARU, "wood" (DEODAR, a Himalayan cedar)
DARBHA/DUURVAA, species of grasses > Danish TORV (TURF; TURBARY, "land from which turf or peat is cut")
DASHA, "ten" > Gr. DEKA (DECADE, DECAGON)
DHARMA, "law, path", in that SVA-DHARMA, "self-law/path", refers to modernusage wherein one must follow one's own path/conscience (e.g. Dharma and Greg TV show)
DHRISHTA, "bold" > Lith. DRISTU > O.E. DURST, past tense of DARE, "be bold"
DHUNI, "roaring, sounding, boisterous" O.N. DUNA, "to thunder, give a hollow sound"(DUN, "to sound", akin to DIN, "a noisy clamor, uproar")
DHVAN, "become covered, extinguished, darken" > A.S. DVAN, "be extinguished" > Eng. DUN, "dark brown"
DHVANI, "roar, thunder" > Lith. DUNDETI. "to sound" (THUNDER, DUNDERBOLT)
DHVAN/DHVAS, "to fall to dust" > Ger. DUNST (DUST)
DIV, "shine" akin to DIVA, "heaven; DIVYA, "divine"; DEVA, "god" > L. DEUS, "god; DIVA, "goddess" < Gr. THEOS (DEISM/THEISM, DEITY, THEOLOGY, DIVA, "opera singer")
DUR, "door".
DVA/DVI, "two" > Gr. DI- > L. DUO, Polish DWA, DWOI-, DWU-, (DUO, DOUBLE, TWIN; DICEPHALOUS, "two-headed")
DVAAR, "door"
EKA, "the same, equal" > L. AEQUUS, "that which is the same" (EQUAL).
HARDA, "heart".
GA, "go" akin to GANTI, GAN*GAA, "swift-goer" (GONE; GANGES [River]; O.E. GANG, "go")
GAGGH, "laugh" (GAG, "laughing-stock") [?]
GAURII, name of a Hindu goddess (see GARISH)
GO, "cow" (Old Saxon CO, Low German KO, "cow". There is even a theory that GOD is derived from Skt. GO, because cows and bulls were symbolic representations of gods.)
GURU, "respected person"
HAARYA, "be robbed" akin to HARA, "destroying" (HARRY, "plunder; devastation"; HARASS)
HEKKI, "hiccup".
I/IDAM, "this, that" > L. ID, "it"; IDEM, "same, identical" (IT, IDENTITY)
I/IR/IT, "go"=L. EO/IRE/II, pres. participle IENT-, "going"; ITER/ITINERIS, "a going, journey (ITINERARY; TRANSIT, "across-go"; TRANSIENT, "person 'going-through'")
I-TARA, "other". Akin to ALTER, ALTERNATE. See ANTAR.
JAN, "produce (offspring, family), cause to be born, come into existence", akin to JANAS, "race, class of people" > L. GENUS, "origin"; GENS/GENTIS, "clan" (CONGENITAL, GENETIC; GENTLE, "well-born, of good family, kind"; GENTILE, GENERATE, GENERATION, GENERIC, GENOCIDE, KIN/KIND; KINDERGARTEN, "childrens' garden")
KAKH, "cackle"
KAL, "count", akin to KAALA, "a fixed point in time, time in general, proper season" > L. CALCULARE, "calculate" (INCACULABLE, CALENDAR)
KAALA, "black" (see See 'colly/collie'.
KAPAALA, "skull" > old Gr. KEPHALE, "head"=L. CAPUT,CAPITIS
(PRECIPITATE, DECAPITATE; CAPO, "Mafia head"; ENCEPHALITIS, CAPTAIN, PER
CAPITA)
KARMA/KARMAN, "act, result, effect" (KARMA)
KATH, "speak about" > O.H.G. QUETHAN (QUOTH, QUOTE)
KONA, "corner, angle, intermediate point of a compass" > Gr.
GONOS/GONON, "-angled" (Eng. -GON, as in OCTAGON, POLYGON, figures
which have corners and angles)
KRI, "make, accomplish, cause, effect, bring to completion" >
L. CREARE/CREATUM, "bring about something" (CREATE, PROCREATE)
LAGHU, "light (in weight, on the feet, on the stomach)"
LAS, "play, frolic, sport", akin to LASYA (LASCIVIOUS,
"arousing sexual feelings")
LIH akin to ALIKSHATI > Gr. LEIKHO (LICK)
LOK, "look"
LOKA, "place" (LOCALE, LOCUS, LOCOMOTION)
LUBH, "desire greatly, allure, excite lust" > L. LUBET, "there is
desire"; LIBIDO, "a desire" (LOVE, LIBIDINOUS)
MA, "first person pronoun" (ME, MY)
MAA, "measure, compare", akin to MAATRA, "measure"=L. METIRI/MENSUS
(METER, COMMENSURATE; IMMENSE, "huge" ["not measurable"])
MAAS < L. MENSIS, Sp. MEZ, Fr. MOIS (MOON, MONTH)
MAD akin to MATTA "mad, insane"
MAH/MAHA, "great"=Gr. MEGAS=L. MAGNUS (MAJESTY, MAGNIFICENT,
MAGNIFY, "make greater"; MAJOR, MAXIMUM, MAXIM)
MAJJ, "be submerged"=L. MERGERE (EMERGENT)
MAKHA, "Mecca"
MAKSH, "a fly" akin to MAKSHAA > L. MUSCA (Sp. MOSQUITO, "small
fly")
MALA, "sin, moral filth" therefore > L. MALUS, "evil, bad"
(MALICIOUS, MALADY)
MANAS, "mind" > L. MENS, MENTIS (MENTAL; MINT, "think")
MANTRA, "incantation, song" (MANTRA, "a repeated word" e.g.
om/aum)
MANU, "man". After some reasearch, however, Oxford English
Dictionary has decided this etymology is incorrect.
MASTA, "weight" (MAST, a weight)
MATRI, "mother"
MI/MITA, "mete out, meter"
MIIV, "move"
MIKSH > L. MISCERE/MIXTUS (MIX, MISCIBLE, PROMISCUOUS)
MRI, "die", akin to MRITA, "dead" > L. MORI, MORTUUS
(MORTALITY, MORTICIAN; MORTGAGE, "death=pledge"). See MUR.
MUR, "killer", akin to MRI, "die" (q.v.) (MURDER)
MUUSH, "mouse"
NA/NIH/NED, "no, not"
NAKTA > Latin NOX/NOCT-, Ger. NACHT (NIGHT, NOCTURNAL)
NAMAN, "name"
NAPAAT, "offspring, (grand)daughter, grandson" > L. NEPOS/NEPOTIS
(NEPOTISM, NEPHEW)
NAS, "nose" (NOSTRIL, NASAL)
NAU, "ship" akin to NAVYA (NAVY, NAVIGATE, NAUTICAL)
NAVA/NAVAN, "nine" (NOVENBER, the ninth month of a previous
calendar; NOVENA, "a nine-day devotional with prayers")
NAVA, "new"=Gr. NEOS=L. NOVUS (NOVELTY, NOVICE, INNOVATE, RENOVATE;
NAPLES/NAPOLI [Italy]: neos + polis, "city")
NU, "now", probably related to NAVA, "new" (q.v.)
PAD, "foot"=L. PES/PEDIS (FOOT, BIPEDAL, "two-footed"; PEDESTRIAN,
"foot-walker"; PEDATE, "having feet"; ARTHROPOD, "joint-foot creature";
OCTOPUS, "eight-footed creature")
PANDITA, "learned, wise" (PUNDIT)
PAN~CHA, "five"=Gr. PENTA (PENTAGON, "five-sided figure")
PARA, "far; previous (in time) (FAR, FORE-FATHER)
PARI-, prefix "about, near"=Eng. PERI- (PERINATAL, PERIMETER)
PATHA, "path"
PHAL > Ger. SPALTEN, "split"
PITRI, "father"=L. PATER (PAPA, PAPAL, POPE
POSHA, "prosperity, wealth, abundance". Oxford English
Dictionary offers POSH (noun), "money", perhaps related to another noun, POSH
(of uncertain etymology): "The suggestion that this word is derived
from the initials of 'port outward, starboard home', referring to the more
expensive side for accommodations on ships formerly traveling between
England and India is often put forward but lacks foundation".
PRA-, prefix "before, in front of"=Eng. PRE- (PREHISTORY, PREDICT)
PUU, "be bright,illuminate" > Gr. PUR/PURA, "funeral pyre=L. PYRA
(O.E. FYR, "fire"; PYROMANIA)
PUUTA, "putrid"
PUUY, "stink" > Fr. PUER, "stink" ("PEE-YOO-EE!"; PEPE LE PEW, a
smelly cartoon skunk)
RAAGA, "musical melody" (Eng. RAGA, "melodic formula of Hindu
music"; RAG/RAGTIME [?])
RAAJ, "rule", akin to RAAJA, "king"=L. REX/REGIS; L. REGERE/RECTUM,
"rule, govern, direct" (RECTIFY, DIRECT, REGAL, REGULATE, RICHARD;
RICH, "having great wealth, powerful"; Ger. REICH, "rich; empire, kingdom")
RAANI, "queen"=Fr. REINE (REIGN. See RAJ, above)
RABH, with verb-form RAPSYATI, "seize, desire vehemently", akin to
RABHASA, "rapid, violent, desirous of" > L. RAPERE/RAPTUS, "seize, force
violently, ravish, hurry" (RAPE, RAPTURE, RAPTURE, RAVISH, RAPID)
RAD, "gnaw, scratch" > L. RODERE, "gnaw"; L. RODERE, "scratch" (RAT,
which is a RODENT.)
RAP, "speak" There is mention in Oxford English Dictionary of
RAP, "utter, say, talk", but the listing is under a verb RAP, "strike
(a blow), knock with a rap". Could there be a mistake involved? Could
some more-modern Hindu word be the source?
RE, "a vocative particle (generally used contemptuously; often
doubled)". Cf. RI, "a sound inarticulate or repeated as in
stammering". Cf. [?] L. RE-, a prefix used to indicate repetition. However, Latin
is supposed to be the original source of Eng. RE-, as in RE-THINK,
RE-DONE, etc.
RI, second note of the seven-tone Hindu musical scale (Cf. [?] RE,
second tone of Western, 7-note scale: do-RE-mi, etc.)
RISHI, a sage
ROMA, "Rome", Italy
RUP, "break off" > L. RUMPERE/RUPTUS, "break" (RUPTURE)
SA, "she, that"
SAD, "sit, sink into despondency, despair" akin to SATTI, "sitting"
> L. SEDERE (SETTLE, RESIDE, RESIDUE, SEDIMENT, SADNESS)
SAM, "together, in common with" (SYMPATHY, "together-mind", in that
there is a sharing of emotions.) See SAMA.
SAMA (#1), "same" (SIMILAR, SIMULATE) See SAM.
SAMA (#2), "any, every" (SOME)
SAPTAN, "seven" (SEPTEMBER, seventh month of the year in earlier
calendars; SEPTENNIAL, "every seven years")
SARPA, "serpent"
SATII, wife of Shiva > Eng. SUTTEE because of her faithfulness to
him and how she cremated herself.
SHAALAA< "large room" > Fr. SALLE (SALON, SALOON)
SHARKARAA, "ground or candied sugar" (SACCHARIN, SUCROSE)
SHATAM, "hundred"=L. CENTUM (CENT, CENTURY, CENTIME)
SIV, "sew" > A.S. SEOWIAN, Goth. SIUJAN (SEW)
SMI, "smile"
SRIV/SRIIV/SHRIV, "to go/become dry; lead astray; frustrate, thwart;
cause to fail". Cf. Eng. [?] SHRIVEL, "become wrinkled, as from heat
[dry up?]; be reduced to an inefficient condition; reduce to
helplessness". Oxford English Dictionary says this word derives from
Swedish but is uncertain.
STHAA > L. STARE (STAND, STAY)
STHAG, "hide,cause to disappear" > Hindi THAG (THUG)
STHAL, "be firm, stand firm" (STILL)
SUUNU, "son"
SVA, "one's own" > L. SE/SUA, Fr. SE/SOI/SA (SELF)
SVAAMIN, "spiritual master, teacher" (SWAMI)
SVAN, "to sound" (SONAR, SONI; SWAN, the bird [sic])
SVADU, "sweet"
SVASTIKA, "cross of good fortune, auspicious sign", akin to SVASTI,
a salutation meaning "be well" (SWASTIKA. Hitler perverted the original
positive intention of the word)
SVID, "sweat" akin to SVEDA, "sweating"
TAANDAVA, Shiva's Dance/"Ring around the Rosy", > Hung. TANC > Germ. TANZ
(DANCE)
TARU, "tree"
TAT, "that"
TRI-, prefix "three" (TRIPLE)
TVA, "you"=L. TU/TE/TUA, Fr. TOI (THOU, THEE)
UBHA, "both" > L. AMBO (AMBIDEXTROUS, AMBIVALENT)
UURDHVA, "elevated, high" > L. ARDUUS, "steep" (ARDUOUS, "steep")
UURJ, "be strong" > L. URGERE, "exert pressure, subject (a person)
to repeated verbal attacks (URGE)
VA, "wind" akin to VAANA, "blowing" > L. VENTUS, "wind" (WIND,
VENTILATE, VENT)
VAACH,
"speech" (VOICE, VOCAL)
VAH, "carry, travel by car" > L. VEHICULUM, VEHERE (VEHICULAR,
WEIGH)
VAKSH, "be angry" (WAX)
VAM, "vomit"
VAN, "gain, conquer" (WIN)
VAS, "wear clothes" > L. VESTIS, "one's own dress" (VEST)
VID, "perceive, observe", akin to VEDA, sacred philosophical
writings > L. VIDERE/VISUS, "see" (VIDEO, VISTA, VISION, PROVIDE/PROVISION,
DIVIDE/DIVISION, DIVIDEND, VEDIC)
VIIR, "be strong, display heroism", akin to VIIRA, "man"; VIIRYA,
"manliness, semen, poison" > L. VIRUS, "poison" (VIRILE, "manly, strong".
To this we might add L. VIRGA, "rod", which later turns into Eng.
VERGE, "rod, penis"; WEREWOLF, "man-wolf"; VIRULENT, "poisonous"; )
YAHU (YAHOO, of
Gulliver's Travels)
YUJ, "yoke,join, bind", akin to YUKTA, "joined"; YUKTI, "junction";
YUGA, "a yoke, couple" > L. IUGARE, "join, fasten"; IUGUM, "yoke";
IUNGERE/IUNCTUM, "join" (JOINT, JUNCTION; YOGA, "union"; YOGI)
YU/YUVAN (JUVENILE, YOUNG)
Sources:
Liddell, Henry George, and Scott, Robert. A GREEK-ENGLISH LEXICON
Monier-Williams, Monier. A SANSKRIT-ENGLISH DICTIONARY
OXFORD ENGLISH DICTIONARY, 2nd edition
OXFORD LATIN DICTIONARY
Stanislawski, J. ENGLISH-POLISH, POLISH-ENGLISH DICTIONARY
Walker, Benjamin. THE HINDU WORLD