Nirukta, Phonetic Variants, and Vedic Dhātu–Svara Taxonomy
स्वरितेद्वै भृञाख्यात उदात्तेद्धाक् प्रकीर्तितः । माङ्हाङ्द्वावनुदात्तेतौ स्वरितेद्दानधातुषु ॥ ४६ ॥
svaritedvai bhṛñākhyāta udātteddhāk prakīrtitaḥ | māṅhāṅdvāvanudāttetau svariteddānadhātuṣu || 46 ||
Pour l’accent svarita, la racine « bhṛñ » est indiquée ; avec l’udātta, « iddhāk » est proclamée. Les deux racines « māṅ » et « hāṅ » sont tenues pour anudātta ; tandis que, pour les racines du groupe « dān », la règle du svarita est énoncée.
Sanatkumara (in instruction to Narada)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It emphasizes that mantra and Vedic speech must be preserved with correct svara (accent), because precision in sacred sound is treated as a support for dharma and inner purification, which ultimately aids the moksha-oriented discipline of the text.
While not a direct bhakti verse, it supports devotion by safeguarding the correct chanting of Vishnu-mantras and Vedic hymns; accurate recitation is presented as a disciplined foundation that protects the intended meaning and spiritual potency of devotional practice.
Vedāṅga Śikṣā (phonetics) and its interface with Vyākaraṇa: the verse gives technical rules about udātta/anudātta/svarita accent behavior for specific dhātu groups used in Vedic chanting and grammatical application.