Bhrigu-samhita [sanskrit]

by Members of the Sansknet Project | 2020 | 45,052 words

The Sanskrit text of the Bhrigu-samhita, an ancient text belonging to the Vaikhanasa Agama section of the Pancaratra tradition and dates to at least 11th century (or earlier). The name “Bhrigusamhita” literally means “The Compendium of Bhrigu” and basically represents a work on Vaishnava theology. The English translation of the Bhrigu-samhita is indicatory only as it was performed by a translation software. Alternative titles: Bhṛgusaṃhitā (भृगुसंहिता), Bhṛgu-saṃhitā (भृगु-संहिता), Bhrgusamhita.

सहस्रशीर्षं पुरुषं सहस्राक्षं निरञ्जनम् ।
सहस्रपादं त्रातारं शरणं त्वाङ्गतोऽस्म्यहम् ॥ ४५ ॥

sahasraśīrṣaṃ puruṣaṃ sahasrākṣaṃ nirañjanam |
sahasrapādaṃ trātāraṃ śaraṇaṃ tvāṅgato'smyaham || 45 ||

Note! The following is not a translation of the above verse, but merely an arbitrary extract of the English text.

The Supreme Personality of Godhead has a thousand heads and a thousand eyes. I take shelter of You, the thousand-footed saviour.

English translation by Google (2023)

Glossary of Sanskrit terms

Note: This extracts Sanskrit terms and links to English definitions from the glossary, based on an experimental segmentation of verse (30.45). Some terms could be superfluous while some might not be mentioned. Click on the word to show English definitions.

Sahasrashirsha, Purusha, Sahasraksha, Niranjana, Sahasrapada, Sahasrapad, Tratri, Sharana, Yushmad, Gat, Gata, Aha, Asmad,

Analysis of Sanskrit grammar

Note: this is an experimental feature and only shows the first possible analysis of the Sanskrit text (Bhrigu-samhita Verse 30.45). If the system was successful in segmenting the sentence, you will see of which words it is made up of, generally consisting of Nouns, Pronouns, Verbs, Participles and Indeclinables. Click on the link to show all possible derivations of the word.

  • Line 1: “sahasraśīrṣaṃ puruṣaṃ sahasrākṣaṃ nirañjanam
  • sahasraśīrṣam -
  • sahasraśīrṣa (noun, masculine)
    [adverb], [accusative single]
    sahasraśīrṣa (noun, neuter)
    [adverb], [nominative single], [accusative single]
    sahasraśīrṣā (noun, feminine)
    [adverb]
    sahasraśīrṣan (noun, masculine)
    [adverb]
    sahasraśīrṣan (noun, neuter)
    [adverb]
  • puruṣam -
  • puruṣa (noun, masculine)
    [adverb], [accusative single]
    puruṣa (noun, neuter)
    [adverb], [nominative single], [accusative single]
    puruṣā (noun, feminine)
    [adverb]
  • sahasrākṣam -
  • sahasrākṣa (noun, masculine)
    [adverb], [accusative single]
    sahasrākṣa (noun, neuter)
    [adverb], [nominative single], [accusative single]
    sahasrākṣā (noun, feminine)
    [adverb]
  • nirañjanam -
  • nirañjana (noun, masculine)
    [adverb], [accusative single]
    nirañjana (noun, neuter)
    [adverb], [nominative single], [accusative single]
    nirañjanā (noun, feminine)
    [adverb]
  • Line 2: “sahasrapādaṃ trātāraṃ śaraṇaṃ tvāṅgato'smyaham
  • sahasrapādam -
  • sahasrapāda (noun, masculine)
    [adverb], [accusative single]
    sahasrapad (noun, masculine)
    [accusative single]
    sahasrapad (noun, neuter)
    [accusative single]
  • trātāram -
  • trātṛ (noun, masculine)
    [accusative single]
  • śaraṇam -
  • śaraṇa (noun, masculine)
    [adverb], [accusative single]
    śaraṇa (noun, neuter)
    [adverb], [nominative single], [accusative single]
    śaraṇā (noun, feminine)
    [adverb]
  • tvāṅ -
  • yuṣmad (pronoun, none)
    [accusative single]
  • gato' -
  • gat (noun, masculine)
    [accusative plural], [ablative single], [genitive single]
    gat (noun, neuter)
    [ablative single], [genitive single]
    gata (noun, masculine)
    [nominative single]
  • asmya -
  • as (verb class 2)
    [present active first single]
  • aham -
  • aha (noun, neuter)
    [adverb], [nominative single], [accusative single]
    asmad (pronoun, none)
    [nominative single]

Other editions:

Also see the following editions of the Sanskrit text or (alternative) English translations of the Bhrigu-samhita Verse 30.45

Cover of edition (2020)

Bhṛgusaṃhitā (a text of the Vaikhānasa-tradition)
by Members of the Sansknet Project (2020)

Publisher: Göttingen Register of Electronic Texts in Indian Languages (GRETIL), SUB Göttingen; Note: The Text is not Proof-read!

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