• GaneshaGanesha
  • септември 6, 2024
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For Basic Sanskrit – Part 3

I was looking for a shorter explanation of the word yoga, and I took the meanings from the dictionary of Professor Vaman Shivram Apte from 1890, I have translated the English meanings through Google translator into Bulgarian. If anyone wants to dig deeper, I’ve put it all below as taken from the dictionary – with the English meanings. If you translate each English word separately, you will be able to come up with several more meanings. Digging through these dictionaries is definitely a lot of fun, but it’s also time-consuming. Dictionaries and Sanskrit are not my goal, but one of my aids to my main goal of restoring an old text. I search for the meanings of certain words in this jungle of countless meanings. Everything written by each dictionary is scrutinized, and everything read is thought over and over. For most words, I have repeated this over a period of time. I look for the underlying meanings of words, and very often they are missing. In some cases the existing meanings are related and suggestive of the underlying meaning, but in other cases there…

  • GaneshaGanesha
  • август 4, 2024
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For Basic Sanskrit – Part 2

I have been using all known Sanskrit-English dictionaries for quite some time now. All the best he has now. I will take the trouble to list most of them, so that there are no misunderstandings, and that no one thinks that I am talking about non-existent things. Some of the dictionaries are:Sanskrit-English Dictionaries:

  • GaneshaGanesha
  • август 2, 2024
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For Basic Sanskrit – Part 1

I have been studying the ancient language called Sanskrit for 24 years, like one year very intensively. In fact, the correct name is Saanusvaarakrta, and it was used by a group of people called Aryans who moved into northern India and Iran several thousand years ago. Where they came from before that, no one knows. Their script is Brahmi, which about 2300 years ago began to be replaced by Devanagari. Personally, I doubt that the Aryans themselves changed their writing. Brahmi and Devanagari are scripts, alphabets, not languages. This language is not Indo-European, nor Indo-Aryan, nor Indian, as historians try to make it out to be. The languages ​​that arose and subsequently became distinct at the local level and by the local population, all called by the name of Sanskrit can be called Indian. Each of these languages ​​contains something of the original Sanskrit, also called Vedic Sanskrit. But that’s all they have in common. The grammar and rules of derived Sanskrit languages ​​were written by the grammarian Panini 2400 years ago. This grammar is a complex system of 4000 rules. One of the rules…