Sanskrit
Words
Sanskrit words have
a special sound and often convey concepts that reflect deep
spiritual meaning. The following are examples
of the Sanskrit
words and phrases presented in "Devanagari:
Gateway to Sanskrit".
Learn
Sanskrit with "Devanagari:
Gateway to Sanskrit" a great way to learn Sanskrit.
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om
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yoga
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inner breath or life energy |
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| dharma
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duty, law, justice, character or merit |
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coiled energy,represented by a sleeping snake |
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| karma
yoga
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the yoga of selfless action |
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| mantra
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a
sound to steady the mind for meditation |
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seed
(A 'seed mantra' may be used as an aid to meditation.) |
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symbolic
circular design to aid in meditation |
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virtuous |
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scholar
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liberation |
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great
vows (In the Yoga Sutras
this refers to the five yamas.) |
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energy
channels in the body |
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shakti
energy, power or ability |
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mukti
liberation or freedom |
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thread or verse |
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peace
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siddhi
an extraordinary power or perfection. |
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guru
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This
is a sample of the Sanskrit words used as learning examples on the
"Devanagari: Gateway to
Sanskrit" DVD or video.
The
names of the following yoga poses also provide familiar examples
to make learning Sanskrit writing and pronounciation a pleasure!
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a yoga pose or seat |
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corpse pose |
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mountain
pose |
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hero's pose |
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boat pose |
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great
seal pose |
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proud
warrior pose |
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cobra pose |
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downward facing dog pose |
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triangle pose |
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child's pose |
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tree pose |
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It's
amazing how many English and Sanskrit words sound alike.
This means 'tooth', and sounds like 'dental'.
Sanskrit
and English words may sound alike when both languages preserved
the original word with little change. These are called 'cognate'
words. Or some words sound alike just by coincidence. Sometimes
it's hard to know which is which and scholars debate over this.
This means either 'bear or 'star' in Sanskrit.
In Latin this is ursus for 'bear' and Ursa Major and Ursa Minor
for the constelation names. So one likely explanation for why the
Sanskrit word would mean both 'bear' and 'star' is that even in
pre-historic times people were already naming those constellations
in that way! In Greek this word became arktos meaning 'bear', leading
to the word Arctic in English. Also in Celtic it became arto meaning
'bear' which led to the name Arthur.
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