Citations:udātta


 * 1971, Saul Levin, The Indo-European and Semitic languages, SUNY Press, ISBN 0873950550, page 175
 * The Indo-Europeanists have erred somewhat in an effort to reduce the S udātta and the G acute as much as possible to a simple unity, which hides both the complex similarities and the differencies between them.
 * 1988, Alexander Lubotsky, The system of nominal accentuation in Sanskrit and Proto-Indo-European, BRILL, ISBN 9004088350, page 23
 * It follows from Pāṇini's description of the Vedic accentual system and from the Prātiśākhyas that the udātta was a rising accent and not just high, as is often suggested.
 * 1998, Anna Giacalone Ramat, Paolo Ramat, The Indo-European Languages, Taylor & Francis, ISBN 041506449X, page 50
 * A single Indo-European word accent can be reconstructed, represented in Vedic by the udātta and in Greek by the acute, both noting high pitch: pitáram = patéra.