

Basically a reference for Sanskrit syntax, but designed to be a progressive composition textbook, with exercises.Girgaon: The Standard Publishing Company, 1925.

The Student’s Guide to Sanskrit Composition. It badly needs updating - it was written at a time when “syntax” basically meant case usages - but it remains somewhat useful.

This is a revised version of his abridgement of Max Müller’s grammar (see below).A listing of all of the verbal roots of Sanskrit and which forms are made from them, classified according to their attestation.The Roots, Verb-forms, and Primary Derivatives of the Sanskrit Language: A Supplement to His Sanskrit Grammar. Whitney was rather disparaging of the “native grammarians” (and the modern scholars who followed them), so you will have to look elsewhere (like Kale or Müller) if you more are interested in the language described by Pāṇini. The most comprehensive grammar in English, which focuses especially on the Vedic phase of the language.
