On 21 November 2010 10:12, Yves Codet <yves.co...@sfr.fr> wrote: > Debatable, I'm not sure :) Gustibus et coloribus non est disputandum. > Personally I don't mind breaks such as a-rhasi. I know many prefer ar-hasi, > but there are some books where you would find a-rhasi. On page 189 of Gray's > edition of Vāsavadattā (Delhi, 1962), for instance, I can see: > ...nirmu-kta..., ...ku-ṭṭimam. > > So, for a start, I did exactly what Arthur described, I chose the easy way. > But I can add rules allowing a break after the first consonant of a > consonant cluster. If there are rules such as: > a1 > ... > r3h > you should get ar-hasi rather than a-rhasi without having to modify > hyphenmins. > > I cannot think of cases where a line-final single-letter hyphenation like a-rhasi would look good. Even examples with alpha-privative, like a-bheda, - which are at least etymologically justified - don't look good.
The trouble here is that of good precedent. We need some roman-script Sanskrit with lots of hyphens that has been typeset by knowledgeable typesetters and looks beautiful. I don't think that exists, or at least, it's not known to me. The biggest romanised corpus I can think of immediately is the Pali Text Society volumes, but of course that's Pali not Sanskrit. And I don't know how good the hyphenation is. I would expect the Clay Sanskrit Library to have good hyphenation; again it's hard to tell, and I don't have all vols. to hand. But in Dezs\H{o}'s *Much Ado About Religion* has a pṛ-cchāmaḥ (p.110) which is pretty ugly, I think, though not impossibly so. The cardinal sin of hyphenating a digraph aspirated consonant is avoided (budd-ha), as far as I can see. I don't have the prose *Daśakumāracarita* which, being prose, should offer more hyphenation cases than verse works. I think we're breaking new ground here, and I think it may take a while for a nice set of hyphenation patterns to settle down. The guidelines surely must include consideration of: 1. etymology - word breaks within compounds (sārva-bhaumas) 2. etymology - prefix, suffix, infix breaks within words (bhav-a-ti bud-dha adhi-kṛtam) 3. euphony - lines shouldn't begin with non-existent initials like rh or mh- (a-rhasi). (Okay, since Pingree's CESS A4, we know there's an author Mhālugi, but how many other words begin with mh-?) Dominik
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