
Create simple Sanskrit sentences by linking a subject with a verb, using singular, dual, and plural forms, in present tense, and study verb endings and noun agreement.
Learn to form simple sentences in Sanskrit using present, past, and future tenses, focusing on verb forms, endings, and subject–verb agreement through guided practice.
This section covers the simple sentence with ashirling, exploring present-tense verb endings and blessing usage in literature, and promoting practice through reading aloud, writing, listening, and speaking.
Learn to use the trtiya vibhakti (instrumental) to express means and instruments in simple Sanskrit sentences, with adverbial usage and examples like knife, auto, and boat.
Section-2 covers simple sentences with the tritiyā vibhakti, highlighting key points, examples, and practice methods for constructing clear, imaginative Sanskrit sentences through active usage.
Explore how to form complex Sanskrit sentences using yad tad pronouns and relative clauses, with elaboration techniques and correlatives like yaha, tasya, and para.
learn to form complex Sanskrit sentences using conjunctions and paired conjunctions, including not only… but also, neither nor, and api, eva, and related patterns.
Master complex Sanskrit sentences by using the conjunctions cet, nacet, and tah paryantam to express time ranges and duration, with examples and practice on starting from and till expressions.
Learn to construct complex Sanskrit sentences using conjunctions like yet and the expressions yat tat yatha tatha yatra tatra. Explore guided examples and dialogue practice to master these correlating meanings.
Explore complex sentence construction in Sanskrit with Shitacarah unique usage of conjunctions, as taught in section 3. Analyze dialogues and everyday phrases to practice versatile sentence formation for conversation.
Explore how Sanskrit verbs form words from verbal roots using suffixes, including ktva and lyap patterns, and practice constructing complex sentences with having done, passive forms, and chained actions.
Explore section 4 of spoken Sanskrit, applying krdanta and ktavatu shatru shanach to form 21 verb forms across genders, conveying present continuous actions and other verb forms through practical dialogues.
Learn how to construct complex Sanskrit sentences in three voices: active, passive, and impersonal, using kartari karmani bhave prayogah, with subject-object-verb harmony and pratima forms.
Explore the Nijanta causal verb in Sanskrit and its agenda forms, and see how thousands and thousands of verb forms arise through causative construction.
Practice on pronoun and noun in pratama vibhakti, matching lingam with nouns across singular, dual, and plural, using fill-in-the-blank exercises and group discussion posts.
practice asmad ushmad and pronoun use in prathama vibhakti, distinguishing first, second, and third person forms, and learn when to prefer third-person or second-person in conversation.
Practice on am na asti nasti in prathama vibhakti, using kim, asti, nasti, and related verbs to form and discuss sentences through guided examples and group postings.
Explore lat-lakara present tense in spoken Sanskrit and master subject verb agreement across singular, dual, and plural forms through reading aloud and sentence-building practice.
Engage in practical Sanskrit verb-form practice through dialogues, exercises, and group discussions, mastering conjugations, sentence construction, and verb usage in everyday contexts.
Practice Sanskrit body parts, numbers, and time expressions through guided exercises, reinforcing cardinal and ordinal concepts and preparing for day-to-day conversation.
Apply la cara and other verb forms to practice present and past tense in Sanskrit. Use guided exercises, examples, and aloud reading to reinforce grammar patterns.
Practice avyayam usage and yadā yatha tatha yatra tatra in spoken Sanskrit, building fluency through sentence construction, bhakti forms, shloka recitation, and Bhagavad Gita verses in group exercises.
Practice all seven vibhakti through fill-in-the-blank exercises and sentence construction drills to reinforce Sanskrit grammar and Bahujan chaturanga mudra usage.
Explore how Shivaji's expansion and alliances illustrate the use of visheshana and visheshya bhavah, with bold terms marking key incidents.
Explore how karma governs action and its consequences through a Mahabharata story, highlighting how time, duty, and circumstance shape responsibility in sarvanama shabdah pullinga.
Explore numbers in some Subhashitani and learn how Sanskrit grammar and shastra vidya unlock reading of shlokas, dharma concepts, and the path to moksha.
Explore the cit cana prayoga exercises and Subhashitani to practice Sanskrit word forms, meanings, and sentence-building. Build confidence in choosing the right words and understanding unconfirmed versus fixed forms.
Master atmanepada future tense in Sanskrit through guided exercises that convert sentences and match verb forms to subjects. Practice includes conversation-based prompts, note-taking, and group corrections for accuracy.
Practice karmani prayoga present tense exercises and understand passive voice with pratima bhakti objects, using harmony yoga patterns to connect subject, verb, and object.
Explore the three prayogas in Sanskrit, distinguishing active and impersonal voices, and identify verbs with or without an object through a story-based practice.
Practice Sanskrit verb forms in lakara through harmony exercises, transforming between active and passive voices, and mastering subject–verb alignment with various sentence patterns.
This lesson presents Karmani Bhave in Lang Lakara exercises, guiding you to form Sanskrit verb conjugations across singular, dual, and plural, with suffix changes like dot two.
Explore tavyat aniyar forms in spoken Sanskrit, study how suffixes attach to the data verb root, and apply through practice exercises linking harmony, prayer yoga, and verb patterns.
Practice spoken Sanskrit for guest reception, greeting guests, and arranging welcome through tea and food. Learn etiquette for known and unknown guests with shubha gaman, respectful address, and hospitality cues.
Explore how a school conversation defines a model school through management, facilities, moral teaching, and student–teacher collaboration, highlighting writing practices, reading rooms, and social activities.
Explore a dynamic classroom dialogue where students blame each other and the guru mediates, addressing reading, writing tools, and discipline to illustrate practical Sanskrit conversation.
Explore a hostel student dialogue in spoken Sanskrit, featuring festival discussions, invitations to home, food customs, seasonal fruits, and practical everyday vocabulary.
Explore everyday spoken Sanskrit through a lively p4 dialogue analysis featuring a library scene and a large family gathering, tracing vocabulary for books, exams, and kinship terms.
Spoken Sanskrit Language is one of the most required qualification to express the meaning of the Sanskrit Texts, Shastra, Purana and Sutra while lecturing as well as learning, because the correct and accurate meaning of the Sanskrit Texts can be explained in Sanskrit only. The other helper languages can not exactly translate the meaning and convey the indented essence of the Sanskrit Texts, though as a beginner we need a helper language. English being most common international language I used it to explain the course contents.
We will learn to speak like a child with two words, three words sentences and gradually we will learn many different parts of sentence constructions like Noun, Verb, Adjectives, Adverb, Conjunctions, Pronouns etc., to construct simple as well as complex sentences progressively lesson after lesson.
The course is divided in three steps - 1) Learn or get introduced to the Basic Sanskrit Language Structural Elements, 2) Practice the basic elements employing in sentences and simultaneously build Sanskrit Vocabulary, 3) Analyze the Sanskrit Conversation using hundred plus dialogue.
Once the learning started, your curiosity and inquisitiveness to construct the sentence of whatever you feel like expressing is given more importance than memorizing a set of pre-made sentences.
Additional resource to build Sanskrit Vocabulary and sentence formation as a conversational style is provided using my YouTube channel "Sanskrit Learners Club" where in I will upload 1000 stories read in Sanskrit and explained with English comprehension.
Using my Google Group further you are facilitated to interact with fellow students and express your thoughts and learn from others different aspects of Spoken Sanskrit.
Beginners as well as those with some basic exposure can get maximum out of this course contents which will have around 250 lectures, which are to be studied sequentially and progressively.
I put a lot of time and efforts in making this course and I am sure that this course will help you get all your doubts cleared and make you comfortable in expressing your thoughts in Spoken Sanskrit as a native speaker of the language.
Please give a try
with regards,
Your Co-Student, Shankar Iyer