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Books on Indian Subjects reviewed by J. Charpentier - 18. Corpus Inscriptionum Indicarum. Vol. I. Inscriptions of Asoka. New Edition. by E. Hultzsch. 14 × 10½, cxxxi + 260 pp., 55 plates. Oxford : Clarendon Press, 1925.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 March 2011
Abstract
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- Type
- Notices of Books
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- Copyright
- Copyright © The Royal Asiatic Society 1926
References
1 Shāhbāzgaṛhī todaśu is, of course, an impossible miswriting.
2 One feels slightly astonished to find in Professor Gray's Indo-Iranian Phonology, § 344, that “ the contraction of ayō to ē, āi is excessively rare ” It is, in fact, thus rare that it never occurred nor ever could do so. The one example given is, of course, trayōdaśa>terasa, which is little less than ridiculous.