This is a reply within a larger thread: view the whole thread

Re: Pronunciation of Teja
That combination probably comes from Sanskrit. The root tij means to prick or sharpen (related to English stick), and teja means sharpness, and by extension, power. The t- is a voiced dental plosive, the -e- is a voiced long close-mid front vowel (started as an a+i dipthong in ancient language, but lost that quality pretty fast), the -j- is a voiced palatal affricate, and the -a is a schwa, which can be made into a long open -a to make it feminine. Incidentally pavana, purifier, is from pU, related to english fire, meaning to purify. It is the usual name for the wind spirits. The -a dropped out in modern north Indian languages.
vote up1vote down

Replies

Do you mean a voiced alveolo-palatal or postalveolar affricate? The voiced palatal affricate is rare, and not usually represented by j (g, gg or gj is typical as the stop component is an allophone of g before front vowels, e.g. geese).
vote up1vote down
Voiced post-alveolar affricate
vote up1vote down
Sorry, "t- is an unvoiced dental plosive"
vote up1vote down