Ida, ḍ�, Idā, Īḍ�: 27 definitions
Introduction:
Ida means something in Hinduism, Sanskrit, Buddhism, Pali, Marathi, Jainism, Prakrit, Hindi, biology. 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.
Alternative spellings of this word include Eid.
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In Hinduism
Purana and Itihasa (epic history)
: archive.org: Puranic Encyclopedia1) ḍ� (इड�).—Daughter of Vāyu (wind-god). ḍ� had a son Utkala by Dhruva.
2) ḍ� (इड�).—Daughter of Manu. In Taittirīya Brāhmaṇa, we find the following reference to this ḍ�:�
2) Once Manu came to know that Devas and Asuras had performed an Agnyādhāna (consecration of the fire). To ascertain whether it was deposited at the proper time, Manu sent ḍ� to them. ḍ� found that both parties had followed the wrong method, She said to Manu:�"Your yajña (Agnyādhāna) should not be as ineffectual as that of the Devas and Asuras. Therefore I myself shall deposit the Trividhāgnis (the three Agnis which are to be set in the proper place) at the proper place." Manu agreed and began his yāga. As a result of it the Devas attained plenty and prosperity.
2) Once when ḍ� was in the presence of Manu. the Devas invited her openly and the Asuras invited her covertly. Since ḍ� accepted the invitation of the Devas, all creatures abandoned the Asuras and joined the party of Devas. (Taittirīya Saṃhitā).
: Cologne Digital Sanskrit Dictionaries: The Purana Index1a) ḍ� (इड�).—See .*
- * Brahmāṇḍa-purāṇa III. 60. 11; Vāyu-purāṇa 85. 7.
1b) A śپ of Māruta.*
- * Brahmāṇḍa-purāṇa IV. 33. 70.

The Purana (पुरा�, purāṇas) refers to Sanskrit literature preserving ancient India’s vast cultural history, including historical legends, religious ceremonies, various arts and sciences. The eighteen mahapuranas total over 400,000 shlokas (metrical couplets) and date to at least several centuries BCE.
Shaktism (Shakta philosophy)
: Google Books: Manthanabhairavatantramḍ� (इड�) refers to one of the three channels (of vital breath) in the body hosting the deities Vāmā and Brahmā.—In the Tantrasadbhāva we find the geometric shapes related to the energies, or aspects of the one energy, that constitute the Triangle. [...] These three energies are the consorts of the gods Brahmā, Viṣṇu and Maheśvara and manifest as a series of triads. At the microcosmic level they engender exhalation (equivalent to creation brought about by Vāmā), inhalation (equivalent to persistence brought about by Jyeṣṭhā) and retention of the breath (equivalent to withdrawal brought about by Raudrī). They are located in the corresponding channels in the body where these three forms of the vital breath function: namely ḍ�, Piṅgalā and Suṣumṇ�, respectively. [...]�.
: academia.edu: The Śāradātilakatantra on Yogaḍ� (इड�) refers to the “left principle channel� and is explained in terms of ṇḍīDz by Lakṣmaṇadeśika in his 11th-century Śaradātilaka.—The body is described, starting from the “bulb� (kanda), the place in which the subtle channels (ḍ�) originate, located between anus and penis (28�9). The three principal channels are ḍ� (left), 辱ṅg (right) and ṣuṇ� (in the centre of the spine and the head). Inside the ṣuṇ� is ٰ, a channel connecting to the place on the top of the skull called the brahmarandhra (30�4).
: Kamakoti Mandali: The Yoginis of Narasimha Vyuhaḍ� (इड�) is the name of a Mātṛkā-Śakti created by Ѳܻ in order to control the plague of demons created by Իܰ.—Accordingly, Andhaka-Asura tried to kidnap Umā (Devī Pārvatī), and was fiercely attacked by Ѳܻ who shot arrows at him from his 辱첹. when the arrows pierced the body of Իܰ, drops of blood fell to earth and from those drops, thousands of Andhakas arose. To control this plague of demons, Ѳܻ created ṛk-Śپ [viz., ḍā] and ordered them to drink the blood of the demons and drain them dry.
: Kamakoti Mandali: Nrisimha matrika-mandalaḍ� (इड�) refers to one of the various ṛk-Śپ created by Rudra in order to destroy the clones that spawned from Ի첹’s body.—Accordingly, [...] Իܰ attempted to abduct Girājanandinī (Pārvatī) and thus ensued a fierce battle between Իܰ and the great Rudra, the Lord of Umā. Like raktabīja, every drop of blood that fell from the body of Andhaka created another Asura like him and in no time, the entire world was filled with Andhakas. To destroy the growing number of Andhakas, Rudra created innumerable ṛk-Śپ [viz., ḍā]. These Śaktis of immense power at once began to drink every drop of blood that flowed from the body of Andhaka, but they could still not effectively contain the emergence of more and more demons.

Shakta (शाक्�, śākta) or Shaktism (śāktism) represents a tradition of Hinduism where the Goddess (Devi) is revered and worshipped. Shakta literature includes a range of scriptures, including various Agamas and Tantras, although its roots may be traced back to the Vedas.
Ayurveda (science of life)
Nighantu (Synonyms and Characteristics of Drugs and technical terms)
: Wisdom Library: Raj Nighantuḍ� (इड�) refers to “earth� and is mentioned in a list of 53 synonyms for ṇi (“eٳ�), according to the second chapter (ṇy徱-) of the 13th-century Raj Nighantu or Rājanighaṇṭu (an Ayurvedic encyclopedia). The Dharaṇyādi-varga covers the lands, soil [viz., ḍā], mountains, jungles and vegetation’s relations between trees and plants and substances, with their various kinds.

Āyurveda (आयुर्वेद, ayurveda) is a branch of Indian science dealing with medicine, herbalism, taxology, anatomy, surgery, alchemy and related topics. Traditional practice of Āyurveda in ancient India dates back to at least the first millenium BC. Literature is commonly written in Sanskrit using various poetic metres.
Vastushastra (architecture)
: Google Books: Consecration Rituals In South Asiaḍ� (इड�) refers to one of the three Nāḍīs contemplated upon during the ritual for the re-installation of damaged idols from the temple, according to Kerala ritual texts such as the Śaivāgamanibandhana, Prayogamañjarī and the Īśanagurudevapaddhati.—[...] [After placing a bundle of darbha grass on top of the ٲٳٱ첹ś pot]:—Then the priest sits facing the idol while the door of the sanctum is closed and imagines that his own ḍ�, 辱ṅg and ṣu and those of the idol are one. Then he visualizes himself seated in the heart of the god and imagines the prāsāda and the temple complex to be two lotuses. Then through the prescribed rituals the priest should spread the caitanya existing in the idol, from its ū through the ṣu up to the tower (ū貹) of the temple and then further spread it up to the enclosure of the temple () and visualize the entire temple complex filled up completely. [...]

Vastushastra (वास्तुशास्त्�, vāstuśāstra) refers to the ancient Indian science (shastra) of architecture (vastu), dealing with topics such architecture, sculpture, town-building, fort building and various other constructions. Vastu also deals with the philosophy of the architectural relation with the cosmic universe.
Biology (plants and animals)
: Google Books: CRC World Dictionary (Regional names)1) Ida in India is the name of a plant defined with Citrus aurantium in various botanical sources. This page contains potential references in Ayurveda, modern medicine, and other folk traditions or local practices It has the synonym Aurantium acre Mill. (among others).
2) Ida in Nigeria is also identified with Sorghum bicolor It has the synonym Milium nigricans Ruiz & Pav. (etc.).
3) Ida in Yoruba is also identified with Microsorum punctatum It has the synonym Phymatodes irioides (Poir.) C. Presl (etc.).
Example references for further research on medicinal uses or toxicity (see latin names for full list):
· Enumeratio Plantarum Javae (1828)
· Methodus Plantas Horti Botanici � (1794)
· Caryologia (1985)
· Austral. Syst. Bot. (2002)
· Observationes Botanicae (1781)
· Icones plantarum formosanarum nec non et contributiones ad floram formosanam. (1915)
If you are looking for specific details regarding Ida, for example pregnancy safety, diet and recipes, health benefits, side effects, chemical composition, extract dosage, have a look at these references.

This sections includes definitions from the five kingdoms of living things: Animals, Plants, Fungi, Protists and Monera. It will include both the official binomial nomenclature (scientific names usually in Latin) as well as regional spellings and variants.
Languages of India and abroad
Pali-English dictionary
: Sutta: The Pali Text Society's Pali-English DictionaryIda, & Ida� (indecl.) (nt. of aya� (ida�) in function of a deictic part.) emphatic demonstr. adv. in local, temporal & modal function, as (1) in this, here: 岹貹ⲹ having its foundation in this, i.e. causally connected, by way of cause Vin.I, 5 = S.I, 136; D.I, 185; Dhs.1004, 1061; Vbh.340, 362, 365; Vism.518; etc.�(2) now, then which idha is more frequent) D.II, 267, 270, almost syn. (for with kira.�(3) just (this), even so, only: idam-atthika just sufficient, proper, right Th.1, 984 (cīvara); Pug.69 (read so for °maṭṭhika, see Pug.A 250); as idam-atthitā “being satisfied with what is sufficient� at Vism.81: expld. as ٳٳ첹-屹 at Pug.A 250. 岹ṃsâԾ inclination to say: only this is the truth, i.e. inclination to dogmatise, one of the four ⲹ-Գٳ, viz. abhijjhā, byāpāda, sīlabbata-parāmāsa, idaṃ� (see Dhs.1135 & Dhs.trsl. 304); D.III, 230; S.V, 59; Nd1 98; Nett 115 sq. (Page 120)
: Sutta: Pali Word Grammar from Pali Myanmar Dictionaryida (ဣ�) [(ti) (တ�)]�
[သဗ္ဗနာမ်ပုဒ� ၂၇-ပုဒ်တို့တွင� "ဣမ"သဗ္ဗနာမ်ပုဒ်မဟုတ်ပ� ဣ�(ဣဒ�) သဗ္ဗနာမ်ပုဒ်ဖြစ်၍ ထိ� ဣဒမ� ဣမဟ� ပြောင်းလဲလာကြောင်� သဒ္ဒနီတိ၌ ဆို၏� နီတိ၊သုတ္တ။၃ဝ၅၊၃ဝ၇ ကြည့်။ ကစ္စာယန� တ� "ဣမဿိဒမံသိသ� နပုံသကေ"တ� ဣမသဒ္ဒေါယေ� ပကတိဘာဝေ� ဝုတ္တော၊ ဣ� ပ� ဣဒ� (ဣဒ�) သဒ္ဒေါယေဝ၊ "ဣဒပ္ပစ္စယတာ"တ� ဧတ္� "ဣဒ"န္တ� ပကတိယ� ဒဿနတော။ နီတိ၊ပဒ။၃၆၇။ ထိုသဒ္ဒနီတိ၌လည်� ယခုစာမူများ၌ "ဣဒံသဒ္ဒေ�,ဣဒံသဒ္ဒဿ" စသည်ဖြင့� ဝိဘတ်မသက်ရသေးသေ� ပကတိပုဒ်ရင်း၌ နိဂ္ဂဟီတန္တဖြင့� "ဣဒံ" ဟ� ချည်� တွေ့ရ၏� ၎င်းနိသျစာမူများ၌ကာ� သရန္တဖြင့� "ဣဒသဒ္ဒေါ" စသည်ဖြင့� တွေ့ရပြန်၏� ထိုသို� စာမူများကွဲလွဲနေသော်လည်� နီတိ၊သုတ္တ။၆၉�-� ၎င်းပုဒ်ကိ� သရန္တ၌,သွင်းထားသောကြောင့� နီတိအလိ� "ဣဒ"ဟ� သရန္တဖြင့� ပကတိပုဒ်ရင်� ဖြစ်သင့်၏� ရူပသိဒ္ဓိ၌ကာ� "ပကတ� စ� သရန္တဿ" သုတ်ဝယ� စသဒ္ဒါဖြင့� "ကိံ"ကဲ့သို့သေ� ဗျဉ္ဇနန္တ၌ ထည့်သွင်းထားသောကြောင့� ရူပသိဒ္ဓိအလိ� "ဣဒံ"ဟ� ဗျဉ္ဇနန္တဖြင့� ပကတိပုဒ်ရင်းဖြစ်သင့်၏� သုတ္တနိဒ္ဒေသ၌လည်� ပကတ� စဿသရန္တဿသုတ်၌ "ဣဒပ္ပစ္စယတာတ� ဧတ� ရူပသိဒ္ဓ� အာဒီသ� ဣဒံသဒ္ဒေ� နိဂ္ဂဟီတန္တောတ� ဂဟေတွ� ဗျဉ္ဇနန္တ� ပကတိဘာဝေနဂဟိတံ၊ သဒ္ဒနီတ� အာဒီသ� ပနဣဒသဒ္ဒေ� သရန္တောတိဂဟေတွ� သရန္တ� ပကတိဘာဝေနဂဟိတံ"ဟ� ဆို၏]
[Pali to Burmese]
: Sutta: Tipiṭaka Pāḷi-Myanmar Dictionary (တိပိဋက-ပါဠိမြန်မ� အဘိဓာန�)岹�
(Burmese text): ဤယောက်ကျား၊ ဤမိန်းမ၊ ဤအမျိုးအနွယ်၊ ဤစိတ်၊ ဤအရာဝတ္ထ� (စသည�)� ဣ�-လည်းကြည့်။
(Auto-Translation): This boy, this girl, this race, this mind, this object (etc.). Look at it as well.

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.
Marathi-English dictionary
: DDSA: The Molesworth Marathi and English Dictionaryḍ� (इड�).—m S A certain tubular vessel, one of the (kṣvāsācyā nāḍyā) channels of the Vital spirit. In the anatomy of the Yoga school are particularized three great passages of the breath and air running from Os coccygis to the head. Of these ḍ� is the passage on the right side, proceeding through (or springing from) the or um- bilical region and through the nose; 辱ṅgḷ� that on the left; ṣumnā ascends betwixt the two, entering into the middle of the head. Ex. ḍ� āṇi 辱ṅgḷ� vāhatī vōgha dōnhī || aha� sōha� smaraṇ� nitya cālē || See ex. under ṣumnā.
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īḍa (ईड).—f (S) The Lime-tree. 2 n also īḍaū� n A lime, Citrus limonum.
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īda (ईद).—f ( A) Any Muhammadan festival or solemnity. 2 m f A common term for the great festivals (makarasaṅkrānti, divāḷ�, dasarā &c.) occurring in the first year after the marriage of a couple: on which they send to each other presents of sesamum, coarse sugar &c.: also such presents.
: DDSA: The Aryabhusan school dictionary, Marathi-Englishḍa (इड).�f The lime-tree; also īḍaū n A lime.
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īda (ईद).�f Any Muhammedan festival or solemnity.
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 dictionaryḍa (इड).—An epithet of Agni.
Derivable forms: ḍa� (इड�).
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ḍ� (इड�).—[il-ac, vā lasya ḍatvam]
1) The earth; प्रवुध्यते नूनमिडातलस्थ� (pravudhyate nūnamḍātalastha�) Mb.
2) Speech.
3) An offering, libation (coming between Ჹ and ԳܲᲹ); अग्निश्चते योनिरिडा � देहः (agniścate yonirḍ� ca deha�) Mahābhārata (Bombay) 3.114.28.
4) Refreshing draught.
5) (Hence) Food.
6) (Fig.) Stream or flow of praise or worship personified as the goddess of sacred speech; इडोपहूता� क्रोशन्त� कुञ्जरास्त्वङ्कुशेरिता� (ḍopahūtā� krośanti kuñjarāstvaṅkuśeritā�) Mahābhārata (Bombay) 12.98.26.
7) Libation and offering of milk.
8) A cow. इडेरन्ते (ḍeԳٱ) &c. ŚB. on MS. 1.3.49.
9) Name of a goddess, daughter of Manu. (She is the wife of Budha and mother of Purūravas; she is also called ٰ屹ṇ� as the daughter of mitra and ṇa).
1) Name of Durgā
11) Heaven.
12) A tubular vessel (ḍībheda), (being in the right side of the body).
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Idā (इद�).�ind. Now, at this (present) moment; oft. with अहन् (ahan); इदाचिदह्नः (峦岹Բ�); इद� ह्यः (idā hya�) only yesterday.
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Īḍ� (ईड�).—[ī�--ṭāp] Praise, commendation.
: Cologne Digital Sanskrit Dictionaries: Shabda-Sagara Sanskrit-English Dictionaryḍ� (इड�).—f.
(-ḍ�) 1. The wife of Buddha, daughter of Ikshaku. 2. The earth. 3. A cow. 4. Speed. 5. A tubular vessel, one of the principal channels of the vital spirit, that which is on the right side of the body. 6. Heaven. 7. The goddess of speech. E. il to direct or send, ka affix, and ṭāp fem. la and ḍa are interchangeable: see .
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Īḍ� (ईड�).—f.
(-ḍ�) Praise. E. ī� to praise, ka and ṭāp affs.
: Cologne Digital Sanskrit Dictionaries: Benfey Sanskrit-English Dictionaryḍ� (इड�).� (akin to ī�), f. 1. Refreshment, ved.
ḍa (इड).—[masculine] [Epithet] of Agni; [Name] of a king.
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ḍ� (इड�).—[feminine] = � + speech, earth, cow; [Name] of a goddess (personif. of worship and sacrifice), a daughter of Manu or Dakṣa, [Epithet] of Durgā.
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Idā (इद�).—[adverb] now, this moment; [with] ahnas this very day; [with] hyas only yesterday.
: Cologne Digital Sanskrit Dictionaries: Monier-Williams Sanskrit-English Dictionary1) ḍa (इड):—[from �] m. Name of Agni (who is to be addressed with prayers, or invoked with the stream of flow of praise), [Vājasaneyi-saṃhitā ii, 3]
2) [v.s. ...] Name of a king (a son of Kardama or Manu), [Viṣṇu-purāṇa] (cf. ila.)
3) ḍ� (इड�):—[from �] f. or (in Ṛg-veda) , (not to be confounded with the inst. case of � above), refreshing draught, refreshment, animation, recreation, comfort, vital spirit, [Ṛg-veda; Atharva-veda; Aitareya-brāhmaṇa]
4) [v.s. ...] offering, libation (especially a holy libation, offered between the Pra-yāga and Anu-yāga, and consisting of four preparations of milk, poured into a vessel containing water, and then partially drunk by the priest and sacrificers; personified in the cow, the symbol of feeding, and nourishment), [Śatapatha-brāhmaṇa i, 8, 1, 1, etc.; Aitareya-brāhmaṇa; Kātyāyana-śrauta-sūtra; Kauśika-sūtra]
5) [v.s. ...] (metaphorically cf. id), stream or flow of praise and worship (personified as the goddess of sacred speech and action, invoked together with Aditi and other deities, but especially in the Āprī hymns together with Sarasvatī and Mahī or Bhāratī), [Ṛg-veda; Atharva-veda; Vājasaneyi-saṃhitā] etc.
6) [v.s. ...] the earth, food, [Sāyaṇa]
7) [v.s. ...] a cow
8) [v.s. ...] the goddess ḍ� or (daughter of Manu or of man thinking on and worshipping the gods; she is the wife of Budha and mother of Purū-ravas; in another aspect she is called Maitrāvaruṇi as daughter of Mitra-Varuṇa, two gods who were objects of the highest and most spiritual devotion)
9) [v.s. ...] Name of Durgā
10) [v.s. ...] of a daughter of Dakṣa and wife of Kaśyapa
11) [v.s. ...] of a wife of Vasudeva and of the Rudra Ṛta-dhvaja
12) [v.s. ...] speech, [Bhāgavata-purāṇa]
13) [v.s. ...] heaven, [cf. Lexicographers, esp. such as amarasiṃha, halāyudha, hemacandra, etc.]
14) [v.s. ...] earth, [Mahābhārata]
15) [v.s. ...] a particular artery on the left side of the body
16) [v.s. ...] a tubular vessel (one of the principal channels of the vital spirit, that which is on the right side of the body), [cf. Lexicographers, esp. such as amarasiṃha, halāyudha, hemacandra, etc.]
17) Idā (इद�):—[=-] ind. ([from] [pronominal] base 3. i, [Pāṇini 5-3, 20]), [Vedic or Veda] now, at this moment
18) [v.s. ...] (often connected with a [genitive case] of ahan e.g. idā cid ahna�, or ahna idā, this present day, ‘now-a-days�; and with hyas e.g. idā hya�, only yesterday), [Ṛg-veda]
19) Īḍ� (ईड�):—[from ī�] f. praise, commendation, [cf. Lexicographers, esp. such as amarasiṃha, halāyudha, hemacandra, etc.]
: Cologne Digital Sanskrit Dictionaries: Yates Sanskrit-English Dictionary1) ḍ� (इड�):�(ḍ�) 1. f. The wife of Buddha, daughter of Ikshwāku; earth; cow; speed; tubular vessel; heaven; Saraswatī.
2) Īḍ� (ईड�):�(ḍ�) 1. f. Praise.
: DDSA: Paia-sadda-mahannavo; a comprehensive Prakrit Hindi dictionary (S)ḍ� (इड�) in the Sanskrit language is related to the Prakrit words: ḍ�, Īḍ�.
[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 dictionary1) ḍ� (इड�):—[[ḍ�]] (nf) see [ṃg]; the earth; speech.
2) Īda (ईद) [Also spelled eid]:�(nf) a Muslim festival; ~[] a place of assembly for offering Id-prayers;—[kā cāṃda honā] to be seen once in a blue moon; to make a rare appearance; —[ke pīche ṭarra] a day after the fair, to kiss the hare’s foot; [īī] pertaining to Id; a present on the occasion of Id.
...
Prakrit-English dictionary
: DDSA: Paia-sadda-mahannavo; a comprehensive Prakrit Hindi dictionary1) ḍ� (इड�) in the Prakrit language is related to the Sanskrit word: ḍ�.
2) Īḍ� (ईड�) also relates to the Sanskrit word: Īḍ�.
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 corpusIda (ಇದ):—[interjection] an interjection to draw one’s attention; 'look here'; lo!.
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Īḍa (ಈಡ):—[noun] the right nostril considered as one of the mystic vein.
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 Dictionary1) Ida (इद):—n. 1. a festival; 2. Relig. Muslim festivals;
2) Īḍ� (ईड�):—n. 1. an epithet of Ganges; 2. praise; commendation;
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.
See also (Relevant definitions)
Partial matches: The, The, Ida, I, Te, Dhavala.
Starts with (+14): Idabhanga, Idabol, Idabola, Idacamasa, Idadadha, Idadatta, Idadika, Idadisu, Idado, Idadu, Idadvasu, Idagalissara, Idagamtu, Idagba moloye, Idaha, Idaho bellflower, Idaho gooseberry, Idaho gumweed, Idaho trillium, Idahpade.
Full-text (+859): Idam, Idavatsara, Idacika, Ila, Idavida, Idaprajas, Dvirida, Idadika, Idajata, Idadadha, Pashvida, Idamrupa, Idaprashitra, Aida, Idacamasa, Idapatra, Idamprakaram, Sushumna, Idamkarya, Idavat.
Relevant text
Search found 249 books and stories containing Ida, ḍ�, Īḍa, Īda, ḍa, Idā, Īḍ�, I-da, I-dā, The ida; (plurals include: Idas, ḍās, Īḍas, Īdas, ḍas, Idās, Īḍās, das, dās, The idas). You can also click to the full overview containing English textual excerpts. Below are direct links for the most relevant articles:
Chandogya Upanishad (Madhva commentary) (by Srisa Chandra Vasu)
Eight Adhyaya, Sixth Khanda (6 mantras)
Second Adhyaya, Twenty-third Khanda (2 mantras)
Panchavimsha Brahmana (English translation) (by W. Caland)
Chapter 10 - The twelve-day rite (and its stomas)
Chapter 15 - Third Chandoma day (of the twelve-day rite) (continued)
Chapter 13 - Prishthya (six-day period of the twelve-day rite) (continued)
Bharadvaja-srauta-sutra (by C. G. Kashikar)
A Descriptive Catalogue of the Sanskrit Manuscripts, Madras (by M. Seshagiri Sastri)
Journal of Ayurveda and Integrative Medicine
International Delegate Assembly: An overview of two decades < [Volume 15 (issue 2), Mar-Apr 2024]
Study on Pandu Roga and iron deficiency anemia in children. < [Volume 3 (issue 4), Oct-Dec 2012]
[No title available] < [Volume 14 (issue 5), Sep-Oct 2023]
The concept of Yoga in Yoga Upanishads (by Philomina T.L)
9. Description of Suṣumnā-Yoga < [Chapter 4 - The contents of the Yogopaniṣads]
10. Description of Saṃpuṭa-Yoga < [Chapter 4 - The contents of the Yogopaniṣads]
18.4. The Concept of Cakra < [Chapter 4 - The contents of the Yogopaniṣads]
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