Sup–Tiṅ Foundations: Prātipadika, Vibhaktis/Kārakas, and Lakāras
Tense–Mood System
ङसोसामश्च षष्ठी स्यात्स्वामिसम्बन्धमुख्यके / ङयोः सुपो वै सप्तमी स्यात्सा चाधिकरणे भवेत्
ṅasosāmaśca ṣaṣṭhī syātsvāmisambandhamukhyake / ṅayoḥ supo vai saptamī syātsā cādhikaraṇe bhavet
វិភត្តិទី៦ ប្រើជាមួយបច្ច័យ ṅas, os និង sām ជាចម្បងសម្រាប់បង្ហាញទំនាក់ទំនងម្ចាស់កម្មសិទ្ធិ ឬការភ្ជាប់ពាក់ព័ន្ធ។ វិភត្តិទី៧ ប្រើជាមួយបច្ច័យ ṅi និង sup ហើយមានន័យអធិករណៈ គឺទីតាំង ឬលំនៅដ្ឋាន។
Lord Vishnu (in instruction to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: Genitive expresses ownership/association; locative expresses locus/adhikaraṇa—two distinct relational mappings in language.
Vedantic Theme: Sambandha (relation) as a cognitive category: ‘mine/of’ (ṣaṣṭhī) vs ‘in/on/at’ (saptamī) mirrors how mind structures reality.
Application: In ritual manuals and devotional stotras, keep ‘of’ (Vishṇoḥ nāma, pitṝṇāṃ) distinct from ‘in/at’ (tīrthe, gṛhe) to avoid doctrinal and procedural confusion.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.205: adhikaraṇa definition elaborated in 1.205.9; Pāṇini 2.3.50+ (ṣaṣṭhī), 2.3.36+ (saptamī) and kāraka discussions
It states that the sixth case is chiefly used to express ownership or relational connection (svāmi-sambandha), guiding correct interpretation of who/what belongs to whom in ślokas and ritual statements.
This specific verse is grammatical rather than narrative; it supports accurate reading of doctrinal passages by clarifying how relations (genitive) and locations/loci (locative) are expressed in Sanskrit.
Use these rules when reading or chanting: interpret ṣaṣṭhī as ‘of/belonging to’ and saptamī as ‘in/at/on’, which reduces misunderstanding in scripture study and ritual instructions.