Bhal: 11 definitions
Introduction:
Bhal means something in Hinduism, Sanskrit, 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.
Languages of India and abroad
Sanskrit dictionary
Bhal (भल्).—I. 1 Ā. (bhālayate, bhālita) To see, behold. -II. 1 Ā.
1) See भल्ल् (bhall).
2) To expound, explain.
Bhal (भल्).—r. 1st and 10th cls. (bhalate bhālayate) 1. To describe, to expound, to explain. 2. To see. r. 1st cl. 1. To hurt, to injure. 2. To give. r. 10th cl. To throw up.
Bhal (भल्).—and bal Bal, † i. 1, [Ātmanepada.] 1. To describe. 2. To kill, to hurt. 3. To give. i. 10, [Ātmanepada.] 1. To describe, to see, to behold (ved.); with the prep. ni, Chand. Up. 452; and [Prakrit] with nis, [Mālavikāgnimitra, (ed. Tullberg.)] 5, 9. 2. † to throw up.
— With the prep. sam sam, To hear, Naiṣ. 6, 76.
Bhal (भल्).—nibhālayati nibhālayate look at, behold, perceive; (nis the same*).
Bhal (भल्):—(or bal) [class] 1. [Ātmanepada] bhalate, to describe or expound or hurt or give, [Dhātupāṭha xiv, 24] ;
— [class] 10. [Ātmanepada] bhālayate, to describe or behold;
—to throw up (?), [xxxiii, 27] (cf. ni-, nir-, śam-√bhal).
Bhal (भल्):—(ṅa) bhalate 1. d. To describe, explain. bhalati 1. a. To hurt; to give. With (ka, ṅa) bhalayate 10. d. To throw up; to appoint.
Bhal (भल्):—, bhalate (paribhāṣaṇe [nirūpaṇe], hiṃsāyām [vadhe] und dāne) [DHĀTUP. 14, 24.] bhālayate (ābhaṇḍane oder nirūpaṇe) [33, 27.] — Vgl. bhall . — ni, bhālayati und te wahrnehmen: yaṃ vai somyaitamaṇimānaṃ na nibhālayase [Chāndogyopaniṣad 6, 12, 2. 13, 2.] nibhālaya [] zu [Kaṭhopaniṣad 1, 6.] guṇaśataśālini piśunaḥ kevaladoṣaṃ nibhālayati (Conj. für vibhā) [Spr. 4016.] — Vgl. nibhālana . — sam vernehmen: vijñaptim saṃbhālayāmāsa [Naiṣadhacarita 6, 76.]
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Bhal (भल्):—mit nis betrachten, im Prākrit nibbhālaantī [Mālavikāgnimitra 5, 9.]
Bhal (भल्):—, bhalate ( parimāṣaṇe , nirūpaṇe , hiṃsāyām , vadhe , dāne). — *Caus. bhālayate ( ābhaṇḍane , nirūpaṇe). — Mit ni , nibhālayati und te sehen , hinsehen , wahrnehmen , erblicken , betrachten [Bālarāmāyaṇa 187,1.] [Zeitschrift der deutschen morgenlandischen Gesellschaft 36,531.] [Hemacandra's Pariśiṣṭaparvan 2,57,180.] [Caitany 31,4.68,6.] — Mit vini untersuchen , durchforschen. bhālita [Bhāminīvilāsa 2,102.] — Mit nis betrachten ; nur im Prākrit nibbhālantī zu belegen. — Mit sam , saṃbhālayati vernehmen.
Bhal (भल्) in the Sanskrit language is related to the Prakrit word: Bhala.
Sanskrit, also spelled संस्कृतम् (saṃskṛtam), 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
Bhal in Hindi refers in English to:—(nm) the forehead; used as the second member in the compound [dekha bhala] meaning looking after, keeping a watch, supervision..—bhal (भाल) is alternatively transliterated as Bhāla.
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Nepali dictionary
Bhal is another spelling for भल [bhala].—n. 1. flood; deluge; 2. flow of milk, oil, blood, etc.; 3. rumor; noise; bustle;
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)
Starts with (+13): Bhala, Bhalaayo, Bhalabhala, Bhalabhalam, Bhalabhalanem, Bhalabhalata, Bhalabhalita, Bhalabhola, Bhalabura, Bhalacandra, Bhalacandracarya, Bhaladami, Bhaladara, Bhaladari, Bhaladarshana, Bhaladarshin, Bhaladmi, Bhaladori, Bhaladrish, Bhalagada.
Full-text: Sambhal, Bhala, Bhall, Nibhal, Bal, Nibhalana, Nirbhal, Shambhali, Abhandana, Barh.
Relevant text
Search found 14 books and stories containing Bhal, Bhaal; (plurals include: Bhals, Bhaals). You can also click to the full overview containing English textual excerpts. Below are direct links for the most relevant articles:
Dictionaries of Indian languages (Kosha)
Page 841 < [English-Urdu-Hindi (1 volume)]
Page 259 < [Tamil-Hindi-English, Volume 1]
Page 840 < [English-Urdu-Hindi (1 volume)]
Rural and Agricultural Glossary (by William Crooke)
Kailash: Journal of Himalayan Studies
Part 19 - Guide to Kumari’s palace < [A Buddhist Guide to the Power Places of the Kathmandu Valley]
Part 1 - Introduction: The history of The Thakali people < [The history of The Thakaali According to the Thakaali Tradition]
Part 2.2 - bKa'-brgyud-pa Responses < [Tantric Buddhist Pilgrimage Sites in Tibet]
World Journal of Pharmaceutical Research
Formulation and evaluation of herbal hand sanitizer < [2022: Volume 11, April issue 4]
Effect of rudraksha extract on Parkinson's and depression. < [2018: Volume 7, June special issue 12]
Development of herbal bandaids for human applications < [2022: Volume 11, April issue 4]
Architectural data in the Puranas (by Sharda Devi)
Vastu-pada-vinyasa—the plan < [Chapter 2 - What is Vastu]
Folklore in Cinema (study) (by Meghna Choudhury)
Part 1.2 - Dr. Bhabendra Nath Saikia–The Litterateur < [Chapter 5 - Dr. Bhabendra Nath Saikia as a Filmmaker]