f. a princess of the Satvats (N. of the mother of Śiśu-Pāla), [MBh.]; [Śiś.]
(scil. vṛtti, q.v.) one of 4 divisions of dramatic style (expressive of ‘bravery, generosity, cheerfulness, and the marvellous’ ; it is of four kinds, viz. utthāpaka, saṃghātya, parivartaka, and saṃlāpa), [Bhar.]; [Daśar.]; [Sāh.]
mf(I)n. relating to the Satvats or the SAtvatas, belonging or sacred to SAtvata or Kṛṣṇa &c., [MBh.]; [Pur.]
containing the word satvat, g. vimuktādi
m. a king of the Satvats (N. of Kṛṣṇa, Bala-deva &c.), [MBh.]; [BhP.]
(pl.) N. of a people, [Śiś.] (= yādava, Sch.)
an adherent or worshipper of Kṛṣṇa, [L.]
a partic. mixed caste (the offspring of an outcaste Vaiśya; accord. to [L.], ‘the son of an outcaste V° and a V° woman who was formerly the wife of a Kṣatriya’), [Mn. x, 43]
m. (fr. satyaka) patr. of Yuyudhāna (a warrior in the Pāṇḍu army who acted as the charioteer of Kṛṣṇa and belonged to the Vṛṣṇi family), [MBh.]; [Hariv.]; [BhP.]
or sātavā°hana, m. N. of a king (fabled to have been discovered, when a child, riding on a Gandharva called Sāta, who, accord. to one legend, was changed into a lion; also = śāli-vāhana, q.v.), [Hcar.]; [Kathās.]; [Rājat.]
relating to or endowed with the quality Sattva (i.e. ‘purity’ or ‘goodness’), pure, true, genuine, honest, good, virtuous (also applied to partic. Purāṇas which exalt Viṣṇu, [IW. 513]), [MaitrUp.]; [Mn.]; [MBh.] &c. internal, caused by internal feeling or sentiment, [Mālatīm.]
natural, not artificial, unaffected (as style), [Sāh.]
m. a state of body caused by some natural emotion (constituting a class of 8 Bhāvas holding a middle place between the Sthāyi- and Vyabhicāri-bhāvas, viz. stambha, sveda, romāñca, svara-vikāra, vepathu, varṇa-vikāra, aśru, pralaya, qq.vv.), [ib.]
N. of Brahmā, [L.]
of the eighth creation by Prajā-pati, [MW.]
n. an offering or oblation (without pouring water), [L.]
sātya—dūta mfn. (fr. satya-dūta) ‘belonging to the trusty messengers’ (said of partic. oblations presented to Sarasvatī and other deities), [TS.], Sch.
sātavāha or sātavā°hana, m. N. of a king (fabled to have been discovered, when a child, riding on a Gandharva called Sāta, who, accord. to one legend, was changed into a lion; also = śāli-vāhana, q.v.), [Hcar.]; [Kathās.]; [Rājat.]
sātvatācāra-vādārtha m. N. of wk. (also called bhakti-vilāsa-tattva-dīpikā, deprecating the slaughter of animals even in sacrifices, by Maheśa-nārāyaṇa).