Hi,

I wrote to Andrew Ollett (U. Of Chicago) regarding  “vaikharī” in Prakrit. He 
replied as below. I got his permission to post his reply as it adds to the 
discussion (and may in fact show that we might not be able to track the proper 
history of this word with current knowledge.)

Jim


Dear Jim (if I may),

I saw the discussion on INDOLOGY but didn't have too much to add. Mayrhofer 
interprets it, sensibly, as if it had come from a hypothetical Middle Indic 
form (I don't say "Prakrit" for reasons that will become clear) *vi-kṣarati, 
which is also the etymology of the Hindi word bikharnā "scatter." The 
Pāiyasaddamahaṇṇava 
<https://nam02.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fdsal.uchicago.edu%2Fdictionaries%2Fsheth%2F&data=04%7C01%7Cjryan%40ciis.edu%7Ca5bf7e180e1048c9f82308d998a58739%7C34d667e31c5d4101b901e5d9fd8d69d9%7C0%7C0%7C637708658969521889%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJWIjoiMC4wLjAwMDAiLCJQIjoiV2luMzIiLCJBTiI6Ik1haWwiLCJXVCI6Mn0%3D%7C1000&sdata=uMi946zgBY9cYLnoHkGauScJiAFFrP%2FU17lVDxs0DJo%3D&reserved=0>,
 an early dictionary of Prakrit, does give vikkhara- as a verbal stem, meaning 
to "scatter" or "spread," attested apparently in the Uvāṅgadasāo, an early Jain 
text. But in fact the usual "Prakrit" form of the root that appears in Sanskrit 
as *kṣar is jhar-. In fact, in the Prakrit texts I have (i.e., literary 
Prakrit, produced between the second and the twelfth centuries), I find neither 
vikkhara- or vijjhara-. While we're at it, an origin from *vikr̥ta- might be 
entertained as well.

None of this, in any case, would explain why Bhartr̥hari should have chosen to 
use a Middle Indic form, or a form derived from Middle Indic, for a major 
element of his theory, especially when there was a Sanskrit term easily to 
hand. I know of no citations of vaikharī or similar words (*vēkharī, *vekkharī, 
*vaïkharī, *veharī, *vikkharī*, etc.) in Prakrit.

I hope this helps, although I suspect it won't!

Andrew


> On Oct 24, 2021, at 6:38 AM, Rolf Heinrich Koch via INDOLOGY 
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Yes, it has a Prakrit origin as Madhev suspects. See
> Mayrhofer, A Concise Etymological Sanskrit Dictionary, vol 3,p. 267
> "vaikharī f. Name eines best. Lautes / name of a particular sound (Up., 
> u.a.): nach Wright, NCSL 24 falsch sanskritisiertes Patronym. von mi. 
> *vikkhara- < ai. viksarä- m. „Abfluß44 (AV), „Beiname Visnus44 (ep.,u.a.)".
> 
> Heiner
> 
> 
> 
> Am 24.10.2021 um 02:11 schrieb Jim Ryan via INDOLOGY:
>> Hi,
>> 
>> I’m curious about the term Vaikharī for articulated speech. In the 
>> Encyclopedia of Indian Philosophies volume on the Grammarians, judging from 
>> the index, it seems this term was first used  by Bhartṛhari (at least in a 
>> grammatical context.) V. S. Apte cites the Mallinatha commentary on 
>> Kumārasaṃbhava for an authoritative reference of the word, but that is quite 
>> late (15th century.) Firstly, are there instances of this word used with any 
>> frequency before Bhartṛhari? Secondly, the lexicons give no good verbal root 
>> or root word for it. I note that the word vaikṛtī as “alteration” has a 
>> similar shape (and wouldn’t fit badly in the “articulated speech” category 
>> of Vāc), but I’m presuming that the word  vaikharī is not a Prakrit-derived 
>> form.  So… where and how do we get to this important term in language theory 
>> in India, which seems unrelated to any other common root or word?
>> 
>> Jim Ryan
>> Asian Philosophies and Cultures (Emeritus)
>> California Institute of Integral Studies
>> 
>> 
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> -- 
> Dr. Rolf Heinrich Koch
> www.rolfheinrichkoch.wordpress.com 
> <http://www.rolfheinrichkoch.wordpress.com/>
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