ugrá mfn. (said to be fr. √ uc [[Uṇ. ii, 29]], but probably fr. a √ uj, or √ vaj, fr. which also ojas, vāja, vajra may be derived; compar. ugratara and ójīyas; superl. ugratama and ójiṣṭha), powerful, violent, mighty, impetuous, strong, huge, formidable, terrible
high, noble
cruel, fierce, ferocious, savage
angry, passionate, wrathful
hot, sharp, pungent, acrid, [RV.]; [AV.]; [TS.]; [R.]; [Śak.]; [Ragh.] &c.
ugrá m. N. of Rudra or Śiva, [MBh.]; [VP.]
of a particular Rudra, [BhP.]
N. of a mixed tribe (from a Kṣatriya father and Śūdra mother; the Ugra, according to [Manu. x, 9], is of cruel or rude [krūra] conduct [ācāra] and employment [vihāra], as killing or catching snakes &c.; but according to the Tantras he is an encomiast or bard), [Mn.]; [Yājñ.] &c.
a twice-born man who perpetrates dreadful deeds Comm. on [Āp. i, 7, 20]; [Āp.]; [Gaut.]
the tree Hyperanthera Moringa, [L.]
N. of a Dānava, [Hariv.]
a son of Dhṛtarāṣṭra, [MBh.]
the Guru of Narendrāditya (who built a temple called Ugreśa)
a group of asterisms (viz. pūrva-phālgunī, pūrvāṣāḍhā, pūrva-bhādrapadā, maghā, bharaṇī)
N. of the Malabar country
ugrá (am), n. a particular poison, the root of Aconitum Ferox
wrath, anger;
, [cf. Zd. ughra: Gk. ὑγι-ής, ὑγίεια, Lat. augeo &c. : Goth. auka, ‘I increase’; Lith. ug-is, ‘growth, increase’; aug-u, ‘I grow’, &c.]