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Vigata, Vigacchita, Vi-gamu-ta, Vi-gamu-ne-ta, Vigamita: 27 definitions

Introduction:

Vigata means something in Buddhism, Pali, Hinduism, Sanskrit, 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.

Alternative spellings of this word include Vigat.

In Hinduism

Jyotisha (astronomy and astrology)

Source: Wisdom Library: Brihat Samhita by Varahamihira

Vigata (विगत) means “free from�, according to the Bṛhatsaṃhitā (chapter 8), an encyclopedic Sanskrit work written by Varāhamihira mainly focusing on the science of ancient Indian astronomy astronomy (Jyotiṣa).—Accordingly, “The years of Jupiter (ṛh貹پ) take their names from the several Nakṣatras in which he reappears after his conjunction with the Sun; and these names are identical with the names of the lunar months. [...] In the Vaiśākha month of Jupiter, princes with their subjects will be virtuous, fearless [i.e., vigata-bhaya] and happy; men will engage in sacrificial rites and there will also be growth of crops�.

Jyotisha book cover
context information

Jyotisha (ज्योति�, dzپṣa or jyotish) refers to ‘astronomy� or “Vedic astrology� and represents the fifth of the six Vedangas (additional sciences to be studied along with the Vedas). Jyotisha concerns itself with the study and prediction of the movements of celestial bodies, in order to calculate the auspicious time for rituals and ceremonies.

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Yoga (school of philosophy)

[«𱹾dzܲ Ա»] � Vigata in Yoga glossary
: ORA: Amanaska (king of all yogas): A Critical Edition and Annotated Translation by Jason Birch

Vigata (विगत) refers to the “absence (of one’s own mind)�, according to the Amaraughaprabodha: a short 13th century treatise on Yoga attributed to Gorakṣanātha which teaches the fourfold system of yoga (Mantra, Laya, Haṭha and Rāja).—Accordingly, “Some drink urine, their own impurity. Some eat their saliva as food. Some draw up [their] semen that falls from a woman’s vagina after having penetrated [her]. And some who are skilled in circulating the breath through the channels of the entire body, consume ٳܲ. They do not have mastery of the body without [the state of] Rājayoga, in which their minds are absent (vigata). When the mind has attained equanimity and the breath moves into the central channel, [then] these Amarolī, Vajrolī and Sahajolī [Mudras] arise�.

Yoga book cover
context information

Yoga is originally considered a branch of Hindu philosophy (astika), but both ancient and modern Yoga combine the physical, mental and spiritual. Yoga teaches various physical techniques also known as āsanas (postures), used for various purposes (eg., meditation, contemplation, relaxation).

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Sports, Arts and Entertainment (wordly enjoyments)

[«𱹾dzܲ Ա»] � Vigata in Arts glossary
: archive.org: Syainika Sastra of Rudradeva with English Translation (art)

Vigata (विगत) refers to “losing (all one’s energy)� (in the summer season), according to the ŚⲹԾ첹-śٰ: a Sanskrit treatise dealing with the divisions and benefits of Hunting and Hawking, written by Rājā Rudradeva (or Candradeva) in possibly the 13th century.—Accordingly, [while discussing the treatment of hawks]: “In summer, [...] the earth’s surface becomes hardly touchable on account of the heated dust; when the animals in this plight forget their natural animosity against each other, lose all their energy (ٲ-ܳٲ), and seem to be under the influence of fever; [...] then the season, like the forest fire, becomes intolerable to these birds [i.e., hawks], [...]. Therefore cooling processes should be now resorted to�.

Arts book cover
context information

This section covers the skills and profiencies of the Kalas (“performing arts�) and Shastras (“sciences�) involving ancient Indian traditions of sports, games, arts, entertainment, love-making and other means of wordly enjoyments. Traditionally these topics were dealt with in Sanskrit treatises explaing the philosophy and the justification of enjoying the pleasures of the senses.

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Ayurveda (science of life)

Veterinary Medicine (The study and treatment of Animals)

: archive.org: The Elephant Lore of the Hindus

Vigata (विगत) refers to the “departing (of power)� (of the intense fury of certain elephants), according to the 15th century ٲṅgī composed by Nīlakaṇṭha in 263 Sanskrit verses, dealing with elephantology in ancient  India, focusing on the science of management and treatment of elephants.—[Cf. chapter 9, “on kinds of must”]: �18. His accumulation of must reduced, when the power has departed (vigata) from the intensity of his fury, his form resplendent in sport with the gentle motion of his limbs restored, having lost his jealousy of (other) elephants, in the reduction of must, (namely, the seventh stage known as) ‘diminution,� he shines like a cloud that has discharged its accumulation of water�.

Ayurveda book cover
context information

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.

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Vedanta (school of philosophy)

: Wikisource: Ashtavakra Gita

Vigata (विगत) refers to the “being devoid� (of any interest in the illusory world�ś), according to the Aṣṭāvakragītā (5th century BC), an ancient text on spirituality dealing with Advaita-Vedānta topics.—Accordingly, [as Aṣṭavakra says to Janaka]: “Knowing yourself as truly one and indestructible, how could a wise man possessing self-knowledge like you feel any pleasure in acquiring wealth? [...] Seeing this world as pure illusion, and devoid of any interest in it (vigata-kautuka) [māyāmātramida� ś� paśyanvigatakautuka�], how should the strong-minded person, feel fear, even at the approach of death? Who is to be compared to the great souled person whose mind is free of desire even in disappointment, and who has found satisfaction in self-knowledge? [...]�

Vedanta book cover
context information

Vedanta (वेदान्�, vedānta) refers to a school of orthodox Hindu philosophy (astika), drawing its subject-matter from the Upanishads. There are a number of sub-schools of Vedanta, however all of them expound on the basic teaching of the ultimate reality (brahman) and liberation (moksha) of the individual soul (atman).

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In Buddhism

Mahayana (major branch of Buddhism)

: academia.edu: A Study and Translation of the Gaganagañjaparipṛcchā

Vigata (विगत) refers to “that which is free (from existence and non-existence)�, according to the Gaganagañjaparipṛcchā: the eighth chapter of the Mahāsaṃnipāta (a collection of Mahāyāna Buddhist Sūtras).—Accordingly as The Lord said: “Śāriputra, the Tathāgata Ekaratnavyūha, seating in the lion’s throne thus, explained the dharma-seal called Gaganapariśuddhi to these Bodhisattvas, which has thirty-two aspects of entrance. What is this Dharma-seal (󲹰ܻ) called Gaganapariśuddhi which has thirty-two aspects of entrance? [...] To wit, 1) all dharmas are free from existence and non-existence (屹屹-ٲ) since they have no proper nature; 2) all dharmas are without a proper nature because of their essential characteristic (ṣaṇa) of cognition (ñپ); [...]�.

: De Gruyter: A Buddhist Ritual Manual on Agriculture

Vigata (विगत) refers to “one who has gone (from all residences)� as occurring in the Heart-mantra (ṛdⲹԳٰ) taught to Vajrapāṇi, according to the ղٳṇḍⲹ첹貹Ჹ, an ancient Buddhist ritual manual on agriculture from the 5th-century (or earlier), containing various instructions for the Sangha to provide agriculture-related services to laypeople including rain-making, weather control and crop protection.

Mahayana book cover
context information

Mahayana (महायान, mahāyāna) is a major branch of Buddhism focusing on the path of a Bodhisattva (spiritual aspirants/ enlightened beings). Extant literature is vast and primarely composed in the Sanskrit language. There are many ūٰ of which some of the earliest are the various Prajñāpāramitā ūٰ.

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Languages of India and abroad

Pali-English dictionary

[«𱹾dzܲ Ա»] � Vigata in Pali glossary
: BuddhaSasana: Concise Pali-English Dictionary

vigata : (pp. of vigacchati) gone away; ceased; deprived of; being without.

: Sutta: The Pali Text Society's Pali-English Dictionary

Vigata, (°-) (pp. of vigacchati, in act. (reflexive) & medpass. function) gone away, disappeared, ceased; having lost or foregone (for-gone=vi-gata), deprived of, being without; often to be translated simply as prep. “without. � It nearly always occurs in compn, where it precedes the noun. By itself rare, e.g. Sn. 483 (sārambhā yassa vigatā); VvA. 33 (padumā mā vigatā hotu). Otherwise as follows: ° Pug. 27; °va SnA 51; ° Dh. 359; °󾱱 Sn. 19; °貹 D. I, 115; DA. I, 286; °󲹱ṇṇ ThA. 80 (=vivaṇṇa); °īٲ PvA. 40; °貹ⲹ Vism. 541; Tikp 7, 21, 59; °貹ṭiٲ DhA. IV, 176; °岹 Mhvs 34, 94; °Ჹ Sn. 517; J. I, 117; °ٲ PvA. 153. Cp. īٲ° in similar application and meaning. (Page 614)

: Sutta: Pali Word Grammar from Pali Myanmar Dictionary

1) vigacchita (ဝိဂစ္ဆိ�) [(ti) (တ�)]�
[vi+gamu+ta]
Ƕ�+ဂę�+တ]

2) vigamita (ဝိဂမိ�) [(ti) (တ�)]�
[vi+gamu+ta]
Ƕ�+ဂę�+တ]

3) vigata (ဝိဂ�) [(ti) (တ�)]�
[vi+gamu+ta� vi+gata.abhi,ṭṭha,1�394.vigata-saṃ.vigaya-prā,addhamāgadhī.]
[ဝ�+ဂမ�+တ။ တစ်နည်� ဝ�+ဂတ။ အဘိ၊ဋ္ဌ၊၁။၃၉၄။ ဝိဂ�-သံ။ ဝိဂ�-ပြာ၊ အဒ္ဓမာဂဓီ။]

[Pali to Burmese]

: Sutta: Tipiṭaka Pāḷi-Myanmar Dictionary (တိပိဋက-ပါဠိမြန်မ� အဘိဓာန�)

󾱳ٲ�

(Burmese text): (�) ကင်းပျောက်ပြီးသော။ (�) ဝေးကွာသော။ ဝိဂတသဘာ�-လည်းကြည့်။ (�) အောက်ပုဒ်ကြည့်။

(Auto-Translation): (1) Disappeared. (2) Distant. Also refer to the inherent nature - look again. (2) See the sub-section.

Pali book cover
context information

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.

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Marathi-English dictionary

: DDSA: The Molesworth Marathi and English Dictionary

vigata (विगत).—p S Gone, departed, past. 2 Separated, severed, parted from. 3 Of whom or which it is gone or departed. Used esp. in comp. as ٲśⲹ Of departed grandeur or glory, vigatastrī, vigatasampatti, vigataprāṇa, vigatamatsara, vigatakāma, vigata- krōdha, vigatadhavā. See others under gata.

: DDSA: The Aryabhusan school dictionary, Marathi-English

vigata (विगत).�p Gone, past. Separated. Of whom or which it is gone or departed. Used in comp. as śⲹ Of departed glory &c.

context information

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.

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Sanskrit dictionary

: DDSA: The practical Sanskrit-English dictionary

Vigata (विगत).�p. p.

1) Departed, gone away, disappeared.

2) Parted, separated.

3) Dead; विगत� तु विदेशस्थ� शृणुयाद्यो ह्यनिर्दशम� (vigata� tu videśastha� śṛṇuyādyo hyanirdaśam) Manusmṛti 5.75.

4) Destitute or devoid of, free from (in comp.); विगतमद� (ٲ岹�).

5) Lost.

6) Dark, obscured.

- A girl in love with another (hence unfit for marriage).

-tam The flight of birds.

: Cologne Digital Sanskrit Dictionaries: Edgerton Buddhist Hybrid Sanskrit Dictionary

Vigata (विगत).—as adj., either lost, hopeless (so perhaps vigaya in AMg. and Prakrit, [Ardha-Māgadhī Dictionary], ڱʲ-岹-ṇṇDZ; but their definitions are not clear), or (Sanskrit Lex. glanzlos, [Boehtlingk and Roth]) unenlightened, dark: ākāṅkṣamāṇ� vigatā vipaṇḍitā, sattvā na jānanti samanta-udyamā� Ѳ屹ٳ i.165.3 (verses), the creatures (before Buddha appeared), in doubt, lost (? dark), ignorant, do not know all the exertions (of the Buddha; next line). Senart fails to see the situation envisaged.

: Cologne Digital Sanskrit Dictionaries: Shabda-Sagara Sanskrit-English Dictionary

Vigata (विगत).—mfn.

(-ta�--ta�) 1. Gone, departed, disappeared. 2. Separated, severed, parted. 3. Freed or exempt from. 4. Lost. 5. Gloomy, dark, obscured. 6. Dead. E. vi implying disunion, (of light, &c.) gata gone.

: Cologne Digital Sanskrit Dictionaries: Cappeller Sanskrit-English Dictionary

Vigata (विगत).—[adjective] gone away, disappeared, ceased, dead, remote; often °� having no �, free from, -less.

: Cologne Digital Sanskrit Dictionaries: Monier-Williams Sanskrit-English Dictionary

1) Vigata (विगत):—[=vi-gata] [from vi] 1. vi-gata n. (for 2. See under -∻) the flight of birds, [Monier-Williams� Sanskrit-English Dictionary]

2) [=vi-gata] [from vi-gam] 2. vi-gata mfn. (for 1. See under 1. vi) gone asunder, dispersed, [Mahābhārata]

3) [v.s. ...] gone away, departed, disappeared, ceased, gone (often [in the beginning of a compound]), [Atharva-veda] etc. etc.

4) [v.s. ...] dead, deceased, [Manu-smṛti v, 75]

5) [v.s. ...] (ifc.) abstaining or desisting from, [Rāmāyaṇa]

6) [v.s. ...] come from (cf. ū-ٲ), destitute of light, obscured, gloomy, dark, [cf. Lexicographers, esp. such as amarasiṃha, halāyudha, hemacandra, etc.]

7) վ (विगत�):—[=-] [from vi-gata > vi-gam] f. a girl in love with another or unfit for marriage, [cf. Lexicographers, esp. such as amarasiṃha, halāyudha, hemacandra, etc.]

: Cologne Digital Sanskrit Dictionaries: Yates Sanskrit-English Dictionary

Vigata (विगत):—[vi-gata] (ta�--ta�) a. Gone, separated; lost; gloomy, dark.

: DDSA: Paia-sadda-mahannavo; a comprehensive Prakrit Hindi dictionary (S)

Vigata (विगत) in the Sanskrit language is related to the Prakrit words: Via, Vigaya.

[Sanskrit to German]

context information

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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Hindi dictionary

[«𱹾dzܲ Ա»] � Vigata in Hindi glossary
: DDSA: A practical Hindi-English dictionary

Vigata (विगत) [Also spelled vigat]:�(a and nm) (the) past; used as a suffix it means deprived/divested of, minus, one who or that which has lost (as ~[bala] rendered or turned powerless); ~[ñԲ] rendered/turned senseless; ~[] lost to attachment, having no attachments any more.

context information

...

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Kannada-English dictionary

: Alar: Kannada-English corpus

Vigata (ವಿಗತ):�

1) [adjective] gone; moved away; departed.

2) [adjective] not present; absent; disappeared.

3) [adjective] separated; parted.

4) [adjective] no longer living; dead.

5) [adjective] not having; lacking.

6) [adjective] not to be found; missing; lost.

--- OR ---

Vigata (ವಿಗತ):—[noun] the act of a bird flying; flight.

context information

Kannada is a Dravidian language (as opposed to the Indo-European language family) mainly spoken in the southwestern region of India.

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Nepali dictionary

: unoes: Nepali-English Dictionary

Vigata (विगत):—adj. 1. gone; departed; 2. last; previous (occasion) preceding (period); 3. parted; separated; 4. dead; 5. desuetude/devoid of; free from; 6. lost; n. dispassionate; devoid of emotion;

context information

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.

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See also (Relevant definitions)

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