Abhisandhi, ṃd, Abhisamdhi: 19 definitions
Introduction:
Abhisandhi means something in Jainism, Prakrit, Hinduism, Sanskrit, Buddhism, Pali, Marathi, Hindi. If you want to know the exact meaning, history, etymology or English translation of this term then check out the descriptions on this page. Add your comment or reference to a book if you want to contribute to this summary article.
In Jainism
Jain philosophy
: archive.org: Anekanta Jaya Pataka of Haribhadra Suri1) Abhisandhi (अभिसन्धि) is synonymous to Samudāyārtha: the “sum and substance� (of a versified exposition of a philosophical doctrine), as used in the ԱԳٲᲹⲹ貹-첹ṇa, a Śvetāmbara Jain philosophical work written by Haribhadra Sūri.—[Cf. Vol. I, P. 3, ll 19-20]—Haribhadra as a commentator has here first given the sum and substance (ܻٳ) of v 1-10 and has then explained the same word by word (ⲹٳ). He has adopted this very method on p. 167 but the opposite one m Vol. II, on p. 29. [...] Synonyms of Samudāyārtha:—Piṇḍārtha, Aidamparya, Bhāvanikā, Bhāvārtha, Paramārtha and Abhisandhi.
2) Abhisandhi (अभिसन्धि) refers to the “implied sense� (of the passage), as occurring in the ԱԳٲᲹⲹ貹-첹ṇa.—[Cf. Vol. II, P. 7, l. 12]
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Languages of India and abroad
Marathi-English dictionary
: DDSA: The Molesworth Marathi and English Dictionaryabhisandhi (अभिसंध�).—m S Aim; the mind as directed or applied, as attent or intent. v ṻŧ.
Marathi is an Indo-European language having over 70 million native speakers people in (predominantly) Maharashtra India. Marathi, like many other Indo-Aryan languages, evolved from early forms of Prakrit, which itself is a subset of Sanskrit, one of the most ancient languages of the world.
Sanskrit dictionary
: DDSA: The practical Sanskrit-English dictionaryṃd (अभिसंध�).�
1) Speech; deliberate declaration, promise.
2) Intention, object, purpose, aim; दम्पत्यो� प्राणसश्लेषे यो�- भिसंधि� कृतः कि� (dampatyo� prāṇasaśleṣe yo'- bhisaṃdhi� kṛta� kila) Mahābhārata (Bombay) 12.266.34; तस्य� अभिसंधिन� विधेयीकृतोऽप� (tasyā abhisaṃdhinā vidheyīkṛto'pi) Mālatīmādhava (Bombay) 1; Daśakumāracarita 38; स्वर्ग° (°) Kumārasambhava 6.47.
3) Implied sense, the meaning intended, as in अयमभिसन्धि� (ⲹԻ�) (frequently occurring in explanatory glosses).
4) Opinion, belief.
5) Special agreement, terms of an agreement, condition, stipulation; अथावश्यमेव माधवसेनः पूज्ये� मोचयितव्यः श्रूयतामभिसन्धिः (athāvaśyameva mādhavasena� pūjyena mocayitavya� śrūyatāmabhisandhi�) M.1.
6) Deception, Making peace or alliance.
8) Junction, combination.
Derivable forms: ṃd� (अभिसंधिः).
: Cologne Digital Sanskrit Dictionaries: Shabda-Sagara Sanskrit-English DictionaryAbhisandhi (अभिसन्धि).—f.
(-Ի�) 1. Cheating, deceit. 2. Purpose, object. 3. Special agreement. 4. Making peace or alliance. 5. Joint junction. E. abhi, and sandhi agreement, &c.
: Cologne Digital Sanskrit Dictionaries: Benfey Sanskrit-English Dictionaryṃd (अभिसंध�).—i. e. - (cf. nidhi), m. Intention, [ʲñٲԳٰ] 200. 11.
: Cologne Digital Sanskrit Dictionaries: Cappeller Sanskrit-English Dictionaryṃd (अभिसंध�).—[masculine] intention, purpose, interest, condition; ū첹 [adverb] with a fixed purpose.
: Cologne Digital Sanskrit Dictionaries: Monier-Williams Sanskrit-English Dictionary1) ṃd (अभिसंध�):—[=-ṃd] [from �-] m. speaking or declaring deliberately, purpose, intention, object, meaning
2) [v.s. ...] special agreement, [Sāhitya-darpaṇa]
3) [v.s. ...] cheating, deceiving
4) [v.s. ...] making peace or alliance, [cf. Lexicographers, esp. such as amarasiṃha, halāyudha, hemacandra, etc.]
5) [v.s. ...] joint, junction, [cf. Lexicographers, esp. such as amarasiṃha, halāyudha, hemacandra, etc.]
: Cologne Digital Sanskrit Dictionaries: Goldstücker Sanskrit-English DictionaryAbhisandhi (अभिसन्धि):—[tatpurusha compound] f.
(-Ի�) 1) Speaking, saying, declaring (with the implied sense of deliberateness); e. g. Śṅk (on the passage of the Chh. Up. quoted s. v. Ի) …sa dahyatetha hanyate rājapuruṣai� svakṛtenānṛtābhisaṃdhidoṣeṇa�. yadātmābhisandhyanabhisaṃdhikṛte mokṣabandhane (liberation or bondage caused by a—righteous—or by a false declaration) …tatsatya� sa ātmā &c.; or Sāhityad.: abhivalamabhisaṃdhiśchalena ya�.
2) Intent, purpose, aim, interest in an object; e. g. Śṅk (on the Ved. ūٰ: adṛṣṭāniyamāt): …ahamida� phala� prāpnavānīda� pariharāṇi . ittha� prayate . ittha� karavāṇītyevaṃvi abhisaṃdhyādaya� pratyātma� pravartamānā adṛṣṭasyātmanā� ca svasvāmibhāva� niyaṃsyantīti . netyāha .. (ūٰ:) abhisaṃdhyādiṣvapi caivam; or Ved. ūٰ: na ca kārye pratipattyabhisaṃndhi� (Anūpanar. Śirom.: prajāpate� sabhā� veśma prapadye . iti pratipattyṃd� prāptisaṃkalpa�); or Gautama: abhisaṃdhimātrātputriketyekeṣām ‘some say that a ٰܳ (q. v.) may be appointed merely by intention� (another category being the ٰܳ appointed by an express declaration; comp. Kullūka: abhisaṃdhimātrakṛtā . vāgvyavahāreṇa na kṛtā); or Śāntip. Mahābh.: ya� karotyanabhisaṃdhipūrvaka� (unintentional) tacca nirṇudati yatpurā kṛtam . nāpriya� tadubhaya� kuta� priya� tasya tajjanayatīha kurvata�; or Mitāk�.: nanu kāmakṛte prāyaścittābhāvātkatha� vyavahāryatva� tadabhāvaścānabhisadhikṛteparādhe prāyaścittamiti vasiṣṭhavacanāt. Comp. also the inst. s. v. ṃhٲ.
3) Implied sense, bearing (of a sentence &c.); used thus frequently by commentators, e. g. ī�. (on Բ. 2. 27. or 61. or 96.) or the ٲٳٲ첹ī. (p. 17. 27. 29. on passages in law-books): ⲹԻ� ‘such is the sense of the passage�.
4) Belief, opinion (with the implied sense of erroneousness); e. g. Bhaṭṭik.: dadaṃśa tāmrāmburuhābhisaṃdhistṛṣṇātura� pāṇitalepi dhṛṣṇu� ‘the impudent bee parched with thirst bit her in the palm of her hand, believing it to be a red lotus� (Jayam.: raktapadmametadityabhisaṃdhirabhiprāyo yasya bhṛṅgasya sa). [
5) Joint junction.
6) Making peace or alliance.
7) Cheating, deceiving (Wilson).] E. with sam and abhi, kṛt aff. ki.
: Cologne Digital Sanskrit Dictionaries: Yates Sanskrit-English DictionaryAbhisandhi (अभिसन्धि):—[abhi-sandhi] (Ի�) 2. f. Idem.
: DDSA: Paia-sadda-mahannavo; a comprehensive Prakrit Hindi dictionary (S)ṃd (अभिसंध�) in the Sanskrit language is related to the Prakrit words: ṃd, ṃd.
[Sanskrit to German]
Sanskrit, also spelled संस्कृतम� (ṃsṛt), is an ancient language of India commonly seen as the grandmother of the Indo-European language family (even English!). Closely allied with Prakrit and Pali, Sanskrit is more exhaustive in both grammar and terms and has the most extensive collection of literature in the world, greatly surpassing its sister-languages Greek and Latin.
Hindi dictionary
: DDSA: A practical Hindi-English dictionaryṃd (अभिसंध�) [Also spelled abhisandhi]:�(nf) a conspiracy, plot.
: DDSA: A practical Hindi-English dictionaryAbhisandhi in Hindi refers in English to:�(nf) a conspiracy, plot..—abhisandhi (अभिसंध�) is alternatively transliterated as ṃd.
...
Prakrit-English dictionary
: DDSA: Paia-sadda-mahannavo; a comprehensive Prakrit Hindi dictionaryṃd (अभिसंध�) in the Prakrit language is related to the Sanskrit word: ṃd.
Prakrit is an ancient language closely associated with both Pali and Sanskrit. Jain literature is often composed in this language or sub-dialects, such as the Agamas and their commentaries which are written in Ardhamagadhi and Maharashtri Prakrit. The earliest extant texts can be dated to as early as the 4th century BCE although core portions might be older.
Kannada-English dictionary
: Alar: Kannada-English corpusṃd (ಅಭಿಸಂಧ�):�
1) [noun] something set up as an object to be achieved or attained; a purpose; a target; an aim.
2) [noun] a secret plan for accomplishing a usu. evil or unlawful end; a plot.
Kannada is a Dravidian language (as opposed to the Indo-European language family) mainly spoken in the southwestern region of India.
Nepali dictionary
: unoes: Nepali-English DictionaryAbhisandhi (अभिसन्धि):—n. 1. special agreement; 2. conspiracy; plot; 3. making peace; alliance;
Nepali is the primary language of the Nepalese people counting almost 20 million native speakers. The country of Nepal is situated in the Himalaya mountain range to the north of India.
Pali-English dictionary
[Pali to Burmese]
: Sutta: Tipiṭaka Pāḷi-Myanmar Dictionary (တိပိဋက-ပါဠိမြန်မ� အဘိဓာန�)Ի�
(Burmese text): [အဘ�+သ�+ဓ�+ဣ] စိတ္တေအဘိသန္ဓယတီတ� အဘိသန္ဓိ၊ ဒွီသု။ ဓာန်၊ဋီ။၇၆၆။ အဘိသန္ဓ� (ပ�) [(အဘ�+သမ�+ဓ�+ဘာဝ�-ကိ။ သံ။ (�) အဇ္ဈာသ�,(�) အဓိပ္ပါ�,(�) အာသ�,(�) အဘိသန္ဓ�,(�) ဘာ�,(�) အဓိမုတ္တ�,(�) ဆန္ဒ၊ နှလုံးသွင်�-ရိုးရင်�-ကြံစည�-ရည်ရွယ�-ချက်၊ အလို။ဓာန်၊၇၆၆။ (�) ဆက�-စပ�-ပေါင်�-ဆု�-ခြင်း၊ တွ�-ဖက�-ပူ�-ပေါင်�-ခြင်း။ (�) ပြောဆိ�-ကြေည�-ခြင်း။ (�) လိုချင�-တပ်မက�-မြှော်လင့�-တောင့်�-ခြင်း။ (�) ထင်မြင�-ယူ�-ယုံကြည�-ချက်၊ မှန်း�-ကြံစည�-ရည်သန�-ရည်ရွယ�-ချက်။ (�) သဘောသ�-ငြိမ်းအေ�-ပြေလည�-ခြင်�-သေ� စာချုပ်။ (�) သစ္စာဖောက�-လိမ်လည�-လှည့်စာ�-ခြင်း။ ဝါစပ္ပတိ။ ကပ္ပဒုမ။ ကောတ္ထုဘ။]
(�) စိတ်ထား၊ နှလုံးသွင်း၊ အလို၊ သဘော။ (�) ပြောဆိ�-ကြေည�-ခြင်း။ ကောင်းစွ�-ချင့်ချိန�-စဉ်းစာ�-�-ပြောဆိ�-ကြေည�-ခြင်း။ (�) ဥပ္ပန္နာဘိသန္ဓ�-ကြည့်။
(Auto-Translation): [Abhi+Sampada+Dhara+i] The essence of the mind, Abhisamadhi, Dwi-thu. Dhana, Thi. 766. Abhisamadhi refers to (1) the connection and amalgamation, (2) the act of speaking and declaring, (3) the desire and aspiration, (4) the belief and conviction, (5) the document of pacification, (6) betrayal and deceit - the essence. (1) Mindset, heart, desire, essence. (2) The act of speaking and declaring, well-reasoned articulation. (2) Consider the Upanabhisamadhi.

Pali is the language of the Tipiṭaka, which is the sacred canon of Theravāda Buddhism and contains much of the Buddha’s speech. Closeley related to Sanskrit, both languages are used interchangeably between religions.
See also (Relevant definitions)
Partial matches: Sandhi, Sam, Abhi, I, Dhavala.
Starts with: Abhisamdhike, Abhisamdhiya, Abhisandhicitta, Abhisandhika, Abhisandhipubba, Abhisandhipubbakata.
Full-text (+2): Durabhisamdhi, Abhisamdhikrita, Abhisamdhipurvakam, Abhisamdhipurva, Matapitiabhisandhi, Anabhisandhikrita, Anabhisandhi, Uppannabhisandhi, Abhisamdhaya, Ahisamdhi, Abhisandhika, Abhisandhicitta, Abhisandhipubba, Paramartha, Bhavanika, Bhavartha, Aidamparya, Samudayartha, Samudaya, Abhisandhana.
Relevant text
Search found 9 books and stories containing Abhisandhi, Abhi-sam-dha-i, Abhi-sa�--i, Abhi-saṃdhi, Abhi-samdhi, Abhi-sandhi, ṃd, Abhisamdhi; (plurals include: Abhisandhis, is, saṃdhis, samdhis, sandhis, ṃds, Abhisamdhis). You can also click to the full overview containing English textual excerpts. Below are direct links for the most relevant articles:
Brahma Sutras (Govinda Bhashya) (by Kusakratha das Brahmacari)
A Descriptive Catalogue of the Sanskrit Manuscripts, Madras (by M. Seshagiri Sastri)
Page 206 < [Volume 3 (1906)]
Bhakti-rasamrta-sindhu (by Śrīla Rūpa Gosvāmī)
Verse 1.4.13 < [Part 4 - Devotional service in Love of God (prema-bhakti)]
Maha Prajnaparamita Sastra (by Gelongma Karma Migme Chödrön)
Appendix 1 - The sufferings of Śāriputra, Pilindavatsa and Lavaṇabhadrika < [Chapter XXXVII - The Ten Concepts]
Brahma Sutras (Shankara Bhashya) (by Swami Vireshwarananda)
Chapter IV, Section III, Adhikarana V < [Section III]
Yasastilaka and Indian culture (Study) (by Krishna Kanta Jandiqui)