In Sanskrit grammar a tatpuruşa (तत्पुरुष) compound is a dependent determinative compound, i.e. a compound XY meaning a type of Y which is related to X in a way corresponding to one of the grammatical cases of X.
There are many tatpuruşas (one for each of the noun cases, and a few others besides); in a tatpuruşa, one component is related to another. For example, "doghouse" is a dative compound, a house for a dog. It would be called a caturti-tatpuruşa (caturti refers to the fourth case — that is, the dative). The most frequent kind is the genitive tatpuruşa. Examples are:-
Tatpuruşas are named after an example of the type: see in the list above.
The term caturti-tatpuruşa is a karmadhāraya (a subtype of tatpuruşa), translating to "being both dative, and a tatpuruşa".
Note: in Vedic Sanskrit rájaputra is a bahuvrihi and means "having a king as a son", and rajapútra is a tatpuruşa and means "king's son": notice where the Vedic udātta accent is.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Tatpurusa".
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