word-adjacent adverbs
Adverbs attached to the word. E.g. To write, because of work. For and mula are lexical adverbs (word-adjacent adverbs).
Before the word 'kama' had 'roots', 'kama' was the common form of 'kama'. Before the lexical preposition is formed, the preceding word has to be normalized.
More examples :-
In the evening, the children went home. Ghara is a common form, kand is a lexical form.
The farmer was resting under the tree in the afternoon. tree (common form), down (adverbial form)
There is a flower garden in front of our school. School (Saru), in front (S.A) Guruji was standing near the blackboard and teaching. planks (saru), near (sh.a.)
Verbal adverbs are mainly attached to a noun or a word that functions as a noun. But sometimes they need verbs and adverbs too.
A conjunction formed after a lexical adverb indicates a relationship with another word in the same sentence.
Since the lexical avyaya is non-vyaya, it does not undergo any change according to gender, word, inflection.
When dealing with a lexical avaya word, that word has a common form.
The following are the forms of sabdayogic avyava. -
Present tense – before, after, until, past, before, before
Dynamic - into, under, up to, from, from
locative – lately, in, near, beside, beside, outside, in, behind, in front of
Causative – from, by, by, by, by, by, by, by hand
Hetuvachaka – atha, karita, reasons, nimitta, pretyartha, for, praise
Character reader – except, fold, read, without, personal, besides
Comparatives – tam, so, paris, than, in
Qualifiers – like, more like, even, same, like, suitable
Kaivalyavachak – only, not, but, only, but
Accumulator – only, also, but, only, finely, also, this
Relatives – twenty, subjects
Companions – with, with, with, with, together with, together with
Participles – inside, outside, under
Interchangeable – instead of, in place of, in place of, about
Dikvakhaka – to, copy, to, for
Opposite – Opposite, mating
Result Reader – Add
Source : Google
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