10.119.1
इति॒ वा इति॑ मे॒ मनो॒ गामश्वं॑ सनुया॒मिति॑
कु॒वित्सोम॒स्यापा॒मिति॑
10.119.1
íti vā́ íti me máno
gā́m áśvaṃ sanuyām íti
kuvít sómasyā́pām íti
10.119.1
itifrom íti
from vaí
from íti
from ahám
from mánas-
from áśva-
from √sanⁱ-
from íti
from kuvíd
from sóma-
from √pā- 2
from íti
10.119.1
THIS, even this was my resolve, to win a cow, to win a steed: Have I not drunk of Soma juice?
| Source index | Surface | Lemma | Information |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10.119.1 | íti iti : f. ityaí (dat.) See √ i above iti : (for 2. See s.v.) iti : íti ind. (fr. pronominal base 3. i), in this manner, thus (in its original signification íti refers to something that has been said or thought, or lays stress on what precedes; in the Brāhmaṇas it is often equivalent to ‘as you know’, reminding the hearer or reader of certain customs, conditions, &c. supposed to be known to him). In quotations of every kind íti means that the preceding words are the very words which some person has or might have spoken, and placed thus at the end of a speech it serves the purpose of inverted commas (íty uktvā, having so said; íti kṛtvā, having so considered, having so decided). It may often have reference merely to what is passing in the mind, e.g. bālo 'pi nāvamantavyo manuṣya íti bhūmipaḥ, a king, though a child, is not to be despised, saying to one's self, ‘he is a mortal’, ([Gr. 928.]) In dram. íti tathā karoti means ‘after these words he acts thus’. Sometimes íti is used to include under one head a number of separate objects aggregated together (e.g. ijyādhyayanadānāni tapaḥ satyaṃ kṣamā damaḥ . alobha íti mārgo 'yam, ‘sacrificing, studying, liberality, penance, truth, patience, self-restraint, absence of desire’, this course of conduct, &c.) íti is sometimes followed by evam, iva, or a demonstrative pronoun pleonastically (e.g. tām brūyād bhavatīty evam, her he may call ‘lady’, thus). íti may form an adverbial compound with the name of an author (e.g. íti-pāṇini, thus according to Pāṇini). It may also express the act of calling attention (lo! behold!) It may have some other significations, e.g. something additional (as in ítyādi, et caetera), order, arrangement specific or distinctive, and identity. It is used by native commentators after quoting a rule to express ‘according to such a rule’ (e.g. anudāttaṅita íty ātmanepadam bhavati, according to the rule of Pāṇini, [i, 3, 12], the Ātmane-pada takes place). kim íti = kim, wherefore, why? (In the Śatapatha-brāhmaṇa ti occurs for íti; cf. Prākṛt ti and tti.) iti : ‘and so forth’ (iti ceti ca, ‘thus and thus’, ‘in this and that manner’), [MBh.] 🔎 íti | íti iti : f. ityaí (dat.) See √ i above iti : (for 2. See s.v.) iti : íti ind. (fr. pronominal base 3. i), in this manner, thus (in its original signification íti refers to something that has been said or thought, or lays stress on what precedes; in the Brāhmaṇas it is often equivalent to ‘as you know’, reminding the hearer or reader of certain customs, conditions, &c. supposed to be known to him). In quotations of every kind íti means that the preceding words are the very words which some person has or might have spoken, and placed thus at the end of a speech it serves the purpose of inverted commas (íty uktvā, having so said; íti kṛtvā, having so considered, having so decided). It may often have reference merely to what is passing in the mind, e.g. bālo 'pi nāvamantavyo manuṣya íti bhūmipaḥ, a king, though a child, is not to be despised, saying to one's self, ‘he is a mortal’, ([Gr. 928.]) In dram. íti tathā karoti means ‘after these words he acts thus’. Sometimes íti is used to include under one head a number of separate objects aggregated together (e.g. ijyādhyayanadānāni tapaḥ satyaṃ kṣamā damaḥ . alobha íti mārgo 'yam, ‘sacrificing, studying, liberality, penance, truth, patience, self-restraint, absence of desire’, this course of conduct, &c.) íti is sometimes followed by evam, iva, or a demonstrative pronoun pleonastically (e.g. tām brūyād bhavatīty evam, her he may call ‘lady’, thus). íti may form an adverbial compound with the name of an author (e.g. íti-pāṇini, thus according to Pāṇini). It may also express the act of calling attention (lo! behold!) It may have some other significations, e.g. something additional (as in ítyādi, et caetera), order, arrangement specific or distinctive, and identity. It is used by native commentators after quoting a rule to express ‘according to such a rule’ (e.g. anudāttaṅita íty ātmanepadam bhavati, according to the rule of Pāṇini, [i, 3, 12], the Ātmane-pada takes place). kim íti = kim, wherefore, why? (In the Śatapatha-brāhmaṇa ti occurs for íti; cf. Prākṛt ti and tti.) iti : ‘and so forth’ (iti ceti ca, ‘thus and thus’, ‘in this and that manner’), [MBh.] 🔎 íti | invariable |
| 10.119.1 | vaí vai : (orig. identical with √ 2. vā) cl. 1. P. ([Dhātup. xxii, 24]) vā́yati, to become languid or weary or exhausted, [RV.] (śoṣaṇe, [Dhātup.]); to be deprived of (gen.), [RV. viii, 47, 6]; P. and (ep. also Ā.), to blow, [Āpast.]; [MBh.] vai : vaí ind. a particle of emphasis and affirmation, generally placed after a word and laying stress on it (it is usually translatable by ‘indeed’, ‘truly’, ‘certainly’, ‘verily’, ‘just’ &c.; it is very rare in the [RV.]; more frequent in the [AV.], and very common in the Brāhmaṇas and in works that imitate their style; in the Sūtras it is less frequent and almost restricted to the combination yady u vai; in Manu, [MBh.] and the Kāvyas it mostly appears at the end of a line, and as a mere expletive. In [RV.] it is frequently followed by u in the combination vā́ u [both particles are separated, [v, 18, 3]] ; it is also preceded by u and various other particles, e.g. by íd, áha, utá; in the Brāhmaṇas it often follows ha, ha sma, eva; in later language api and tu. According to some it is also a vocative particle). 🔎 vaí | vaí vai : (orig. identical with √ 2. vā) cl. 1. P. ([Dhātup. xxii, 24]) vā́yati, to become languid or weary or exhausted, [RV.] (śoṣaṇe, [Dhātup.]); to be deprived of (gen.), [RV. viii, 47, 6]; P. and (ep. also Ā.), to blow, [Āpast.]; [MBh.] vai : vaí ind. a particle of emphasis and affirmation, generally placed after a word and laying stress on it (it is usually translatable by ‘indeed’, ‘truly’, ‘certainly’, ‘verily’, ‘just’ &c.; it is very rare in the [RV.]; more frequent in the [AV.], and very common in the Brāhmaṇas and in works that imitate their style; in the Sūtras it is less frequent and almost restricted to the combination yady u vai; in Manu, [MBh.] and the Kāvyas it mostly appears at the end of a line, and as a mere expletive. In [RV.] it is frequently followed by u in the combination vā́ u [both particles are separated, [v, 18, 3]] ; it is also preceded by u and various other particles, e.g. by íd, áha, utá; in the Brāhmaṇas it often follows ha, ha sma, eva; in later language api and tu. According to some it is also a vocative particle). 🔎 vaí | invariable |
| 10.119.1 | íti iti : f. ityaí (dat.) See √ i above iti : (for 2. See s.v.) iti : íti ind. (fr. pronominal base 3. i), in this manner, thus (in its original signification íti refers to something that has been said or thought, or lays stress on what precedes; in the Brāhmaṇas it is often equivalent to ‘as you know’, reminding the hearer or reader of certain customs, conditions, &c. supposed to be known to him). In quotations of every kind íti means that the preceding words are the very words which some person has or might have spoken, and placed thus at the end of a speech it serves the purpose of inverted commas (íty uktvā, having so said; íti kṛtvā, having so considered, having so decided). It may often have reference merely to what is passing in the mind, e.g. bālo 'pi nāvamantavyo manuṣya íti bhūmipaḥ, a king, though a child, is not to be despised, saying to one's self, ‘he is a mortal’, ([Gr. 928.]) In dram. íti tathā karoti means ‘after these words he acts thus’. Sometimes íti is used to include under one head a number of separate objects aggregated together (e.g. ijyādhyayanadānāni tapaḥ satyaṃ kṣamā damaḥ . alobha íti mārgo 'yam, ‘sacrificing, studying, liberality, penance, truth, patience, self-restraint, absence of desire’, this course of conduct, &c.) íti is sometimes followed by evam, iva, or a demonstrative pronoun pleonastically (e.g. tām brūyād bhavatīty evam, her he may call ‘lady’, thus). íti may form an adverbial compound with the name of an author (e.g. íti-pāṇini, thus according to Pāṇini). It may also express the act of calling attention (lo! behold!) It may have some other significations, e.g. something additional (as in ítyādi, et caetera), order, arrangement specific or distinctive, and identity. It is used by native commentators after quoting a rule to express ‘according to such a rule’ (e.g. anudāttaṅita íty ātmanepadam bhavati, according to the rule of Pāṇini, [i, 3, 12], the Ātmane-pada takes place). kim íti = kim, wherefore, why? (In the Śatapatha-brāhmaṇa ti occurs for íti; cf. Prākṛt ti and tti.) iti : ‘and so forth’ (iti ceti ca, ‘thus and thus’, ‘in this and that manner’), [MBh.] 🔎 íti | íti iti : f. ityaí (dat.) See √ i above iti : (for 2. See s.v.) iti : íti ind. (fr. pronominal base 3. i), in this manner, thus (in its original signification íti refers to something that has been said or thought, or lays stress on what precedes; in the Brāhmaṇas it is often equivalent to ‘as you know’, reminding the hearer or reader of certain customs, conditions, &c. supposed to be known to him). In quotations of every kind íti means that the preceding words are the very words which some person has or might have spoken, and placed thus at the end of a speech it serves the purpose of inverted commas (íty uktvā, having so said; íti kṛtvā, having so considered, having so decided). It may often have reference merely to what is passing in the mind, e.g. bālo 'pi nāvamantavyo manuṣya íti bhūmipaḥ, a king, though a child, is not to be despised, saying to one's self, ‘he is a mortal’, ([Gr. 928.]) In dram. íti tathā karoti means ‘after these words he acts thus’. Sometimes íti is used to include under one head a number of separate objects aggregated together (e.g. ijyādhyayanadānāni tapaḥ satyaṃ kṣamā damaḥ . alobha íti mārgo 'yam, ‘sacrificing, studying, liberality, penance, truth, patience, self-restraint, absence of desire’, this course of conduct, &c.) íti is sometimes followed by evam, iva, or a demonstrative pronoun pleonastically (e.g. tām brūyād bhavatīty evam, her he may call ‘lady’, thus). íti may form an adverbial compound with the name of an author (e.g. íti-pāṇini, thus according to Pāṇini). It may also express the act of calling attention (lo! behold!) It may have some other significations, e.g. something additional (as in ítyādi, et caetera), order, arrangement specific or distinctive, and identity. It is used by native commentators after quoting a rule to express ‘according to such a rule’ (e.g. anudāttaṅita íty ātmanepadam bhavati, according to the rule of Pāṇini, [i, 3, 12], the Ātmane-pada takes place). kim íti = kim, wherefore, why? (In the Śatapatha-brāhmaṇa ti occurs for íti; cf. Prākṛt ti and tti.) iti : ‘and so forth’ (iti ceti ca, ‘thus and thus’, ‘in this and that manner’), [MBh.] 🔎 íti | invariable |
| 10.119.1 | me me : cl. 1. Ā. ([Dhātup. xxii, 65]) mayate (ep. also P. mayati; pf. mame Gr.; aor. amāsta, [ib.]; fut. mātā, māsyate, [ib.]; ind.p. -mitya or -māya, [ib.]). to exchange, barter (cf. apa-. and ni-√ me) : Caus. māpayati, [ib.] : Desid. mitsate, [ib.] : Intens. memīyate, māmeti, māmāti, [ib.] me : (onomat.) imitative of the sound of a bleating goat (me-me-√ kṛ, to bleat), [Kāv.] 🔎 me | ahám aham : ahám nom. sg., ‘I’, [RV.] &c. aham : = ahaṃkaraṇa, q.v., (hence declinable gen. ahamas, &c.), [BhP.] aham : [Zd. azem; Gk. ἐγώ; Goth. ik; Mod. Germ. ich; Lith. asz; Slav. az]. 🔎 ahám | pronounSGGEN |
| 10.119.1 | mánaḥ | mánas- manas : mánas n. mind (in its widest sense as applied to all the mental powers), intellect, intelligence, understanding, perception, sense, conscience, will, [RV.] &c. &c. (in phil. the internal organ or antaḥ-karaṇa of perception and cognition, the faculty or instrument through which thoughts enter or by which objects of sense affect the soul, [IW. 53]; in this sense is always regarded as distinct from ātman and puruṣa, ‘spirit or soul’ and belonging only to the body, like which it is — except in the Nyāya — considered perishable; as to its position in the various systems See for Nyāya and Vaiśeṣika, [IW. 63]; [67]; [76], for Sāṃkhya and Vedānta, [ib.] [84]; [109]; [117]; in [RV.] it is sometimes joined with hṛd or hṛdaya, the heart, [Mn. vii, 6] with cakṣus, the eye) manas : the spirit or spiritual principle, the breath or living soul which escapes from the body at death (called asu in animals; cf. above), [ib.] manas : thought, imagination, excogitation, invention, reflection, opinion, intention, inclination, affection, desire, mood, temper, spirit, [ib.] (ifc. after a verbal noun or an inf. stem in °tu = having a mind or wishing to; cf. draṣṭu-m° &c.; manaḥ √ kṛ, to make up one's mind; with gen., to feel inclination for ; manaḥ √ kṛ, pra-√ kṛ, √ dhā, vi-√ dhā, √ dhṛ, √ bandh and Caus. of ni-√ viś with loc. dat. acc. with prati, or inf., to direct the mind or thoughts towards, think of or upon; manaḥ with sam-ā-√ dhā, to recover the senses, collect one's self; with √ han See mano-hatya; mánasā ind. in the mind; in thought or imagination; with all the heart, willingly; with gen., by the leave of; with iva = °seva, as with a thought, in a moment; with √ man, to think in one's mind, be willing or inclined; with saṃ-√ gam, to become unanimous, agree; manasi with √ kṛ, to bear or ponder in the mind, meditate on, remember; with ni-√ dhā, to impress on the mind, consider; with √ vṛt, to be passing in one's mind) manas : N. of the 26th Kalpa (s.v.), [Cat.] manas : of the lake Mānasa, [BhP.] manas : manaso dohaḥ N. of a Sāman, [ĀrṣBr.] manas : [cf. Gk. μένος; Lat. Miner-va.] 🔎 mánas- | nominal stemSGNNOM |
| 10.119.1 | gā́m | gáv- ~ gó- | nominal stemSGMACC |
| 10.119.1 | áśvam | áśva- aśva : áśva m. (2. rarely 3 [RV.]) (√ aś, [Uṇ.]) ifc. f. a horse, stallion, [RV.] &c. aśva : the horse (in the game of chess) aśva : the number ‘seven’ (that being the number of the horses of the sun) aśva : the archer (in the Zodiac), [VarBṛ.] aśva : a particular kind of lover (horse-like in strength), [L.] aśva : N. of a teacher (with the patron. Sāmudri), [ŚBr. xiii] aśva : of a son of Citraka, [Hariv. 1921] aśva : of a Dānava, [MBh. i, 2532] aśva : [Zd. aspa; Lat. equus; Gk. ἵππος, &c.] aśva : Nom. P. aśvati, to behave like a horse, [Pāṇ. iii, 1, 11], Sch. 🔎 áśva- | nominal stemSGMACC |
| 10.119.1 | sanuyām | √sanⁱ- san : in comp. for sat. san : cl. 1. P., cl. 8. P. Ā. ([Dhātup. xiii, 21]; [xxx, 2]) sánati, °te or sanóti, sanute (Ā. rare and only in non-conjugational tenses; pf. sasā́na, [RV.]; p. sasavás, [ib.] f. sasanúṣī, [Br.]; sasanivas or senivas Gr.; sene, [ib.]; aor. asāniṣam [Subj. saniṣat Ā. saniṣāsmahe, sániṣanta] [RV.]; Impv. sániṣantu, [SV.]; seṣam, set, [MaitrS.]; [Br.]; asāta Gr.; Prec. sanyāt, sāyāt, [ib.]; fut. sanitā, [ib.]; saniṣyáti, [RV.]; [Br.]; inf. sanitum Gr.), to gain, acquire, obtain as a gift, possess, enjoy, [RV.]; [AV.]; [Br.]; [ŚrS.]; to gain for another, procure, bestow, give, distribute, [RV.]; (Ā.) to be successful, be granted or fulfilled, [ib.] : Pass. sanyate or sāyate, [Pāṇ. vi, 4, 43] : Caus. sānayati (aor. asīṣaṇat) Gr.: Desid. of Caus. sisānayiṣati, [ib.] : Desid. sisaniṣati (Gr.) or síṣāsati (? sīṣatī, [AV. iv, 38, 2]), to wish to acquire or obtain, [RV.]; [TS.]; [AV.]; to wish to procure or bestow, [RV.]; [AV.] : Intens. saṃsanyate, sāsāyate, saṃsanti (Gr.), to gain or acquire repeatedly (only 3. pl. saniṣṇata, [RV. i, 131, 5]). san : in go-ṣán, q.v. san : (in gram.) a technical term for the syllable sa or sign of the desiderative. san : N. of an era (current in Bengal and reckoned from 593 A.D.), [RTL. 433]. 🔎 √sanⁱ- | rootSGPRSACT1OPT |
| 10.119.1 | íti iti : f. ityaí (dat.) See √ i above iti : (for 2. See s.v.) iti : íti ind. (fr. pronominal base 3. i), in this manner, thus (in its original signification íti refers to something that has been said or thought, or lays stress on what precedes; in the Brāhmaṇas it is often equivalent to ‘as you know’, reminding the hearer or reader of certain customs, conditions, &c. supposed to be known to him). In quotations of every kind íti means that the preceding words are the very words which some person has or might have spoken, and placed thus at the end of a speech it serves the purpose of inverted commas (íty uktvā, having so said; íti kṛtvā, having so considered, having so decided). It may often have reference merely to what is passing in the mind, e.g. bālo 'pi nāvamantavyo manuṣya íti bhūmipaḥ, a king, though a child, is not to be despised, saying to one's self, ‘he is a mortal’, ([Gr. 928.]) In dram. íti tathā karoti means ‘after these words he acts thus’. Sometimes íti is used to include under one head a number of separate objects aggregated together (e.g. ijyādhyayanadānāni tapaḥ satyaṃ kṣamā damaḥ . alobha íti mārgo 'yam, ‘sacrificing, studying, liberality, penance, truth, patience, self-restraint, absence of desire’, this course of conduct, &c.) íti is sometimes followed by evam, iva, or a demonstrative pronoun pleonastically (e.g. tām brūyād bhavatīty evam, her he may call ‘lady’, thus). íti may form an adverbial compound with the name of an author (e.g. íti-pāṇini, thus according to Pāṇini). It may also express the act of calling attention (lo! behold!) It may have some other significations, e.g. something additional (as in ítyādi, et caetera), order, arrangement specific or distinctive, and identity. It is used by native commentators after quoting a rule to express ‘according to such a rule’ (e.g. anudāttaṅita íty ātmanepadam bhavati, according to the rule of Pāṇini, [i, 3, 12], the Ātmane-pada takes place). kim íti = kim, wherefore, why? (In the Śatapatha-brāhmaṇa ti occurs for íti; cf. Prākṛt ti and tti.) iti : ‘and so forth’ (iti ceti ca, ‘thus and thus’, ‘in this and that manner’), [MBh.] 🔎 íti | íti iti : f. ityaí (dat.) See √ i above iti : (for 2. See s.v.) iti : íti ind. (fr. pronominal base 3. i), in this manner, thus (in its original signification íti refers to something that has been said or thought, or lays stress on what precedes; in the Brāhmaṇas it is often equivalent to ‘as you know’, reminding the hearer or reader of certain customs, conditions, &c. supposed to be known to him). In quotations of every kind íti means that the preceding words are the very words which some person has or might have spoken, and placed thus at the end of a speech it serves the purpose of inverted commas (íty uktvā, having so said; íti kṛtvā, having so considered, having so decided). It may often have reference merely to what is passing in the mind, e.g. bālo 'pi nāvamantavyo manuṣya íti bhūmipaḥ, a king, though a child, is not to be despised, saying to one's self, ‘he is a mortal’, ([Gr. 928.]) In dram. íti tathā karoti means ‘after these words he acts thus’. Sometimes íti is used to include under one head a number of separate objects aggregated together (e.g. ijyādhyayanadānāni tapaḥ satyaṃ kṣamā damaḥ . alobha íti mārgo 'yam, ‘sacrificing, studying, liberality, penance, truth, patience, self-restraint, absence of desire’, this course of conduct, &c.) íti is sometimes followed by evam, iva, or a demonstrative pronoun pleonastically (e.g. tām brūyād bhavatīty evam, her he may call ‘lady’, thus). íti may form an adverbial compound with the name of an author (e.g. íti-pāṇini, thus according to Pāṇini). It may also express the act of calling attention (lo! behold!) It may have some other significations, e.g. something additional (as in ítyādi, et caetera), order, arrangement specific or distinctive, and identity. It is used by native commentators after quoting a rule to express ‘according to such a rule’ (e.g. anudāttaṅita íty ātmanepadam bhavati, according to the rule of Pāṇini, [i, 3, 12], the Ātmane-pada takes place). kim íti = kim, wherefore, why? (In the Śatapatha-brāhmaṇa ti occurs for íti; cf. Prākṛt ti and tti.) iti : ‘and so forth’ (iti ceti ca, ‘thus and thus’, ‘in this and that manner’), [MBh.] 🔎 íti | invariable |
| 10.119.1 | kuvít | kuvíd kuvid : kuvíd ind. (fr. 1. ku and id; g. cādi), if, whether (a particle of interrogation used in direct and indirect questions), [RV.]; [AV.]; [ŚBr.] kuvid : ‘where, where at all’ [‘often, frequently’, [Sāy.]] [RV. iv, 51, 4] kuvid : (a verb following this particle does not lose its accent, [Pāṇ. viii, 1, 30]) kuvid : = bahu, [Naigh. iii, 1.] 🔎 kuvíd | invariable |
| 10.119.1 | sómasya | sóma- soma : sóma m. (fr. √ 3. su) juice, extract, (esp.) the juice of the Soma plant, (also) the Soma plant itself (said to be the climbing plant Sarcostema Viminalis or Asclepias Acida, the stalks [aṃśu] of which were pressed between stones [adri] by the priests, then sprinkled with water, and purified in a strainer [pavitra]; whence the acid juice trinkled into jars [kalaśa] or larger vessels [droṇa]; after which it was mixed with clarified butter, flour &c., made to ferment, and then offered in libations to the gods [in this respect corresponding with the ritual of the Iranian Avesta] or was drunk by the Brāhmans, by both of whom its exhilarating effect was supposed to be prized; it was collected by moonlight on certain mountains [in [RV. x, 34, 1], the mountain Mūja-vat is mentioned]; it is sometimes described as having been brought from the sky by a falcon [śyena] and guarded by the Gandharvas; it is personified as one of the most important of Vedic gods, to whose praise all the 114 hymns of the 9th book of the [RV.] besides 6 in other books and the whole, [SV.] are dedicated; in post-Vedic mythology and even in a few of the latest hymns of the [RV.] [although not in the whole of the 9th book] as well as sometimes in the [AV.] and in the [Br.], Soma is identified with the moon [as the receptacle of the other beverage of the gods called Amṛta, or as the lord of plants, cf. indu, oṣadhi-pati] and with the god of the moon, as well as with Viṣṇu, Śiva, Yama, and Kubera; he is called rājan, and appears among the 8 Vasus and the 8 Loka-pālas [[Mn. v, 96]], and is the reputed author of [RV. x, 124, 1], [5]-[9], of a law-book &c.; cf. below), [RV.] &c. &c. soma : the moon or moon-god (see above) soma : a Soma sacrifice, [AitĀr.] soma : a day destined for extracting the Soma-juice, [ĀśvŚr.] soma : Monday (= soma-vāra), [Inscr.] soma : nectar, [L.] soma : camphor, [L.] soma : air, wind, [L.] soma : water, [L.] soma : a drug of supposed magical properties, [W.] soma : a partic. mountain or mountainous range (accord. to some the mountains of the moon), [ib.] soma : a partic. class of Pitṛs (prob. for soma-pā), [ib.] soma : N. of various authors (also with paṇḍita, bhaṭṭa, śarman &c.; cf. above), [Cat.] soma : = somacandra, or somendu, [HPariś.] soma : N. of a monkey-chief, [L.] soma : sóma (am), n. rice-water, rice-gruel, [L.] soma : heaven, sky, ether, [L.] soma : sóma mfn. relating to Soma (prob. w.r. for sauma), [Kāṭh.] soma : mfn. (prob.) together with Umā, [IndSt.] 🔎 sóma- | nominal stemSGMGEN |
| 10.119.1 | ápām | √pā- 2 pā : f. guarding, protecting, [L.] pā : f. = pūta and pūritaka. pā : cl. 1. P. ([Dhātup. xxii, 27]) píbati (Ved. and ep. also Ā. °te; rarely pipati, °te, [Kāṭh.]; [Br.]) cl. 2. pāti, pāthás, pānti, [RV.]; [AV.]; p. Ā. papāná, [RV.], pípāna, [AV.] (pf. P. papaú, 2. sg. papātha, [RV.]; papitha, [Pāṇ. vi, 4, 64], Sch.; papīyāt, [RV.]; p. papivás, [AV.]; Ā. pape, papire, [RV.]; p. papāná, [ib.]; aor. or impf. apāt, [RV.] [cf. [Pāṇ. ii, 4, 77]]; 3. pl. apuḥ [?] [RV. i, 164, 7]; -pāsta, [AV. xii, 3, 43]; Prec. 3. sg. peyās, [RV.]; fut. pāsyati, °te, [Br.] &c.; pātā Gr.; ind.p. pītvā́, [RV.] &c. &c., °tvī, [RV.]; -pāya, [AV.] &c. &c.; -pīya, [MBh.]; pāyam, [Kāvyād.]; inf. píbadhyai, [RV.]; pātum, [MBh.] &c.; pā́tave, [AV.]; [Br.]; pā́tavaí, [RV.]), to drink, quaff, suck, sip, swallow (with acc., rarely gen.), [RV.] &c. &c.; (met.) to imbibe, draw in, appropriate, enjoy, feast upon (with the eyes, ears &c.), [Mn.]; [MBh.]; [Kāv.] &c.; to drink up, exhaust, absorb, [BhP.]; [Pañc.]; to drink intoxicating liquors, [Buddh.] : Pass. pīyáte, [AV.] &c. &c.: Caus. pāyayati, °te (pf. pāyayām āsā, [MBh.]; aor. apīpyat, [Pāṇ. vii, 4, 4]; ind.p. pāyayitvā, [MBh.]; inf. pā́yayitavaí, [ŚBr.]), to cause to drink, give to drink, water (horses or cattle), [RV.] &c. &c.: Desid. pipāsati ([RV.] also pipīṣati), to wish to drink, thirst, [ib.] : Desid. of Caus. pipāyayiṣati, to wish or intend to give to drink, [Kāṭh.] : Intens. pepīyate (p. °yamāna also with pass meaning), to drink greedily or repeatedly, [Up.]; [Hariv.] pā : [cf. Gk. πέ-πω-κα; Aeol. πώ-νω = πίνω; Lat. pō-tus, pō-tum, bibo for pi-bo; Slav. pi-ja, pi-ti] pā : mfn. drinking, quaffing &c. (cf. agre-, ṛtu-, madhu-, soma- &c.) pā : cl. 2. P. ([Dhāt. xxiv, 48]) pā́ti (Impv. pāhí; pr. p. P. pā́t Ā. pāná, [RV.]; pf. papau Gr.; aor. apāsīt, [Rājat.] Subj. pāsati, [RV.]; fut. pāsyati, pātā Gr.; Prec. pāyāt, [Pāṇ. vi, 4, 68], Sch.; inf. pātum, [MBh.]), to watch, keep, preserve; to protect from, defend against (abl.), [RV.] &c. &c.; to protect (a country) i.e. rule, govern, [Rājat.]; to observe, notice, attend to, follow, [RV.]; [AitBr.] : Caus. pālayati See √ pāl: Desid. pipāsati Gr.: Intens. pāpāyate, pāpeti, pāpāti, [ib.] pā : [cf. Zd. pā, paiti; Gk. πά-ομαι, πέ-πα-μαι, πῶ-ν, &c.; Lat. pa-sco, pa-bulum; Lith. pë-mů́] pā : mfn. keeping, protecting, guarding &c. (cf. apāna-, ritā-, go-, tanū- &c.) pā : cl. 3. Ā. pípīte, to rise against, be hostile (see 2. anūt-√ , p. 41; 2. ut-pā, p. 181; praty-ut- √ , p. 677). 🔎 √pā- 2 | rootSGAORACT1IND |
| 10.119.1 | íti iti : f. ityaí (dat.) See √ i above iti : (for 2. See s.v.) iti : íti ind. (fr. pronominal base 3. i), in this manner, thus (in its original signification íti refers to something that has been said or thought, or lays stress on what precedes; in the Brāhmaṇas it is often equivalent to ‘as you know’, reminding the hearer or reader of certain customs, conditions, &c. supposed to be known to him). In quotations of every kind íti means that the preceding words are the very words which some person has or might have spoken, and placed thus at the end of a speech it serves the purpose of inverted commas (íty uktvā, having so said; íti kṛtvā, having so considered, having so decided). It may often have reference merely to what is passing in the mind, e.g. bālo 'pi nāvamantavyo manuṣya íti bhūmipaḥ, a king, though a child, is not to be despised, saying to one's self, ‘he is a mortal’, ([Gr. 928.]) In dram. íti tathā karoti means ‘after these words he acts thus’. Sometimes íti is used to include under one head a number of separate objects aggregated together (e.g. ijyādhyayanadānāni tapaḥ satyaṃ kṣamā damaḥ . alobha íti mārgo 'yam, ‘sacrificing, studying, liberality, penance, truth, patience, self-restraint, absence of desire’, this course of conduct, &c.) íti is sometimes followed by evam, iva, or a demonstrative pronoun pleonastically (e.g. tām brūyād bhavatīty evam, her he may call ‘lady’, thus). íti may form an adverbial compound with the name of an author (e.g. íti-pāṇini, thus according to Pāṇini). It may also express the act of calling attention (lo! behold!) It may have some other significations, e.g. something additional (as in ítyādi, et caetera), order, arrangement specific or distinctive, and identity. It is used by native commentators after quoting a rule to express ‘according to such a rule’ (e.g. anudāttaṅita íty ātmanepadam bhavati, according to the rule of Pāṇini, [i, 3, 12], the Ātmane-pada takes place). kim íti = kim, wherefore, why? (In the Śatapatha-brāhmaṇa ti occurs for íti; cf. Prākṛt ti and tti.) iti : ‘and so forth’ (iti ceti ca, ‘thus and thus’, ‘in this and that manner’), [MBh.] 🔎 íti | íti iti : f. ityaí (dat.) See √ i above iti : (for 2. See s.v.) iti : íti ind. (fr. pronominal base 3. i), in this manner, thus (in its original signification íti refers to something that has been said or thought, or lays stress on what precedes; in the Brāhmaṇas it is often equivalent to ‘as you know’, reminding the hearer or reader of certain customs, conditions, &c. supposed to be known to him). In quotations of every kind íti means that the preceding words are the very words which some person has or might have spoken, and placed thus at the end of a speech it serves the purpose of inverted commas (íty uktvā, having so said; íti kṛtvā, having so considered, having so decided). It may often have reference merely to what is passing in the mind, e.g. bālo 'pi nāvamantavyo manuṣya íti bhūmipaḥ, a king, though a child, is not to be despised, saying to one's self, ‘he is a mortal’, ([Gr. 928.]) In dram. íti tathā karoti means ‘after these words he acts thus’. Sometimes íti is used to include under one head a number of separate objects aggregated together (e.g. ijyādhyayanadānāni tapaḥ satyaṃ kṣamā damaḥ . alobha íti mārgo 'yam, ‘sacrificing, studying, liberality, penance, truth, patience, self-restraint, absence of desire’, this course of conduct, &c.) íti is sometimes followed by evam, iva, or a demonstrative pronoun pleonastically (e.g. tām brūyād bhavatīty evam, her he may call ‘lady’, thus). íti may form an adverbial compound with the name of an author (e.g. íti-pāṇini, thus according to Pāṇini). It may also express the act of calling attention (lo! behold!) It may have some other significations, e.g. something additional (as in ítyādi, et caetera), order, arrangement specific or distinctive, and identity. It is used by native commentators after quoting a rule to express ‘according to such a rule’ (e.g. anudāttaṅita íty ātmanepadam bhavati, according to the rule of Pāṇini, [i, 3, 12], the Ātmane-pada takes place). kim íti = kim, wherefore, why? (In the Śatapatha-brāhmaṇa ti occurs for íti; cf. Prākṛt ti and tti.) iti : ‘and so forth’ (iti ceti ca, ‘thus and thus’, ‘in this and that manner’), [MBh.] 🔎 íti | invariable |