Nirukta, Phonetic Variants, and Vedic Dhātu–Svara Taxonomy
वाणितिराद्यास्रयश्वापि स्वरितेत उदाहृताः । घृमुखा द्वादश तथा परस्मैपतिनो मताः ॥ ४७ ॥
vāṇitirādyāsrayaśvāpi svariteta udāhṛtāḥ | ghṛmukhā dvādaśa tathā parasmaipatino matāḥ || 47 ||
Bentuk-bentuk yang bermula dengan “vāṇitira” dan yang bersandar pada dasar pelafalan itu dinyatakan sebagai “svarita-ita”. Demikian pula dua belas dhātu yang bermula dengan “ghṛmukha” dipandang sebagai parasmaipada (berakhiran untuk ‘yang lain’)॥47॥
Sanatkumara (in instruction to Narada)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: none
It emphasizes that accurate Vedic sound—especially correct accent (svarita)—and correct grammatical usage (parasmaipada) are part of disciplined sacred learning that supports dharma and higher realization.
Indirectly: bhakti practices often rely on mantra and stotra recitation, and this verse highlights that devotion is strengthened when sacred recitation is performed with proper Vedic phonetics and grammatical precision.
Vedāṅga Śikṣā (Vedic phonetics/accents such as svarita) and Vyākaraṇa (grammatical classification like parasmaipada verb-forms) are explicitly indicated through these technical groupings.