Pratishamayati, Pratiśamayati, Pratiśāmayati: 1 definition
Introduction:
Pratishamayati means something in Hinduism, Sanskrit. 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.
The Sanskrit terms Pratiśamayati and Pratiśāmayati can be transliterated into English as Pratisamayati or Pratishamayati, using the IAST transliteration scheme (?).
Languages of India and abroad
Sanskrit dictionary
: Cologne Digital Sanskrit Dictionaries: Edgerton Buddhist Hybrid Sanskrit DictionaryPratiśamayati (प्रतिशमयति).—q.v.
Pratiśamayati can also be spelled as Pratiśāmayati (प्रतिशामयत�).
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Pratiśāmayati (प्रतिशामयत�).—also °śam° and erroneously °śrām°, °sam° (= Pali paṭisāmeti, puts away, stores; wrongly [Pali Text Society’s Pali-English Dictionary]), (1) stores away (property): hiraṇya (so read)� (etc.) °śāmayet (so Nepalese mss., KN with Kashgar recension °yīt) ṇḍī첹 114.13 (verse); bhāṇḍa� °śāmita� (mss. °śrām°) پ屹Բ 6.9; bhāṇḍa� °śāmayanti پ屹Բ 341.7 (subject merchants); bhāṇḍa� °śāmya ū-پ岹-վԲⲹ ii.68.20 (subject a housewife); (2) puts away (a monk's bowl and robe, after his begging-round): pātracīvara� °śāmayitvā Ѳ屹ٳ i.56.2; °śrāmya, ed. with mss., read °śāmya, پ屹Բ 156.1; °śāmya 516.6; ղ徱 19.9; (a monk's bed, or bed and seat, prepara- tory to setting out on a journey, on which he takes bowl and robe with him), (paribhukta�) śayana� pratiśāmya پ屹Բ 550.10; yathāparibhukta� śayanāsana� pratiśa- mayya پ屹Բ 552.25; 566.4; written °samayya, pātracīva- ra� pra° پ屹Բ 20.4; 199.27; 201.1; 493.28; yathāpari- bhukta-śayanāsana� pra° پ屹Բ 39.20; (3) harbors (a per- son), entertains (privately): (surakṣita� kartavya iti.sa) tena pratiśāmita� ū-پ岹-վԲⲹ ii.99.15; (ye āgantukā bhikṣavo�) tān asau pratiśāmya ib. 199.7; others, 200.17 etc. See also pratisamarpayati.
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Pratisamayati (प्रतिसमयति).�ger. °mayya, for °śam°, see prati- śāmayati.
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.
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Full-text: Pratisamarpayati, Patisameti, Pravishamayati.
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