Vrut atmanepad lat and lut lakar
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hey dude thoda smajh me nhi aaya but mujhse jitna hua kr diya
- agr isme smajh me so u will go youtube nd search same question
- i hope it will help u
All of the verbs we've learned so far are usually called parasmaipada. The word literally means "word for another," and it usually describes two kinds of verbs: verbs of activity (go, walk, wander, ask, stand, steal, find) and verbs used with an object (steal, push, emit). The traditional definition is that the result of the action does not go to the one who acts. So, they are "other-serving" verbs, or verbs for another.
I mention the word parasmaipada as a handy term for the verbs we've studied. In this lesson, we'll study verbs of a different kind. These verbs are called ātmanepada, meaning "word for the self." The traditional definition is that the "fruit of action," meaning the result, goes to the one who acts. Hence, they are "self-serving" verbs, or verbs "for the self."
We can think of the ātmanepada verbs as reflexive verbs since the result of the action, whatever it is, goes back to whatever acted in the first place. For illustration, consider the verb pac, meaning "cook," in the examples below.
The ātmanepada endings are very similar to the parasmaipada endings. You can see this in the behavior of the verb labh, an a+ verb that means "obtain."
labh (a+, A, present tense)
लभ् Singular Dual Plural
Third Person लभते
labhate
लभन्ते
labhante
Second Person लभसे
labhase
First Person लभे
labhe
लभावहे
labhāvahe
लभामहे
labhāmahe
For comparison, here are the endings we've already studied:
gam (a+, P, present tense)
गम् Singular Dual Plural
Third Person गच्छति
gacchati
गच्छन्ति
gacchanti
Second Person गच्छसि
gacchasi
First Person गच्छामि
gacchami
गच्छावः
gacchāvaḥ
गच्छामः
gacchāmaḥ
Apart from the change in the 1st person singular, these changes are regular and easy to remember.
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