Sanskrit has an amazing ability to place words anywhere in a sentence, without any punctuation, and yet keep the meaning intact. This is due to its inflectional system of grammar.
However, in English, the placement of words is rather fixed.
What does it mean? Firstly that in English the Nouns maintain their spellings across usage and communication in the matter of being in the Subject or the Object or Instrument position, whereas in Sanskrit, the same Noun would change its spelling as its purpose changes.
This book has been specifically written to make the reader aware of the noun spellings that undergo change as per usage, in an easy to follow intuitive matrix format.
For the advanced Sanskrit learner, this text serves a fundamental purpose from the Panini Grammar point of view, as it lists the common nouns as they change spellings when the gender has changed masculine, feminine or neuter; or the case has changed nominative, accusative, instrumental, etc.
Gives 7x3 Sup Affixes table with and without Tag letters
Contains relevant Ashtadhyayi Sutras to see spelling changes
Lists 6 types of Sarvanama Pronouns
Lists Declension Process Steps
Lists template for declension (if any) for each word
Gives English Meaning for each word
___ __ _ __ _ = masculine stem _ ending, _________
1 ____ ____ _____
2 _____ ____ ______
3 _____ __________ _____
4 _____ __________ ________
5 ______ __________ ________
6 ______ ______ ________
7 ____ ______ ______
V __ ___ __ ____ __ _____
Similar stems ___ God, _______ Krishna, ___, __ Shiva
meaning Rama, Lord