Sanskrit quote nr. 6744 (Maha-subhashita-samgraha)

Sanskrit text:

उदस्य धैर्यं दयितेन सादरं ।
प्रसादितायाः करवारिवारितम् ॥

udasya dhairyaṃ dayitena sādaraṃ |
prasāditāyāḥ karavārivāritam ||

Index

  1. Introduction
  2. Glossary of terms
  3. Analysis of Sanskrit grammar
  4. About the Mahāsubhāṣitasaṃgraha

Presented above is a Sanskrit aphorism, also known as a subhāṣita, which is at the very least, a literary piece of art. This page provides critical research material such as an anlaysis on the poetic meter used, an English translation, a glossary explaining technical terms, and a list of resources including print editions and digital links.

Glossary of Sanskrit terms

Note: Consider this as an approximate extraction of glossary words based on an experimental segmentation of the Sanskrit verse. Some could be superfluous while some might not be mentioned.

Udasya (उदस्य): defined in 1 categories.
Uda (उद): defined in 10 categories.
Dhairya (धैर्य): defined in 8 categories.
Dayita (दयित): defined in 6 categories.
Sadaram (sādaram, सादरम्): defined in 3 categories.
Sadara (sādara, सादर): defined in 8 categories.
Prasadita (prasāditā, प्रसादिता): defined in 4 categories.
Karavari (karavāri, करवारि): defined in 1 categories.
Varita (vārita, वारित): defined in 5 categories.

Defined according to the following glossaries/dictionaries: Sanskrit, Pali, Purana (epic history), Shaktism (Shakta philosophy), India history, Marathi, Prakrit, Hindi, Kannada, Biology (plants and animals), Tibetan Buddhism (Vajrayana or tantric Buddhism), Natyashastra (theatrics and dramaturgy), Yoga (school of philosophy), Pancaratra (worship of Nārāyaṇa)

Analysis of Sanskrit grammar

Note: this is an experimental feature and only shows the first possible analysis of the Sanskrit verse. 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: “udasya dhairyaṃ dayitena sādaraṃ
  • udasya -
  • udasya (indeclinable)
    [indeclinable]
    uda (noun, neuter)
    [genitive single]
  • dhairyam -
  • dhairya (noun, neuter)
    [adverb], [nominative single], [accusative single]
  • dayitena -
  • dayita (noun, masculine)
    [instrumental single]
    dayita (noun, neuter)
    [instrumental single]
  • sādaram -
  • sādaram (indeclinable)
    [indeclinable]
    sādara (noun, masculine)
    [adverb], [accusative single]
    sādara (noun, neuter)
    [adverb], [nominative single], [accusative single]
    sādarā (noun, feminine)
    [adverb]
  • Line 2: “prasāditāyāḥ karavārivāritam
  • prasāditāyāḥ -
  • prasāditā (noun, feminine)
    [ablative single], [genitive single]
  • karavāri -
  • karavāri (noun, neuter)
    [compound], [adverb], [nominative single], [vocative single], [accusative single]
  • vāritam -
  • vārita (noun, masculine)
    [adverb], [accusative single]
    vārita (noun, neuter)
    [adverb], [nominative single], [accusative single]
    vāritā (noun, feminine)
    [adverb]
    vṛ -> vārita (participle, masculine)
    [adverb from √vṛ]
    vṛ -> vārita (participle, neuter)
    [adverb from √vṛ]
    vṛ -> vāritā (participle, feminine)
    [adverb from √vṛ]
    vṛ -> vārita (participle, masculine)
    [accusative single from √vṛ]
    vṛ -> vārita (participle, neuter)
    [nominative single from √vṛ], [accusative single from √vṛ]

About the Mahāsubhāṣitasaṃgraha

This quote is included within the Mahāsubhāṣitasaṃgraha (महासुभाषितसंग्रह, maha-subhashita-samgraha / subhasita-sangraha), which is a compendium of Sanskrit aphorisms (subhāṣita), collected from various sources. Subhāṣita is a genre of Sanskrit literature, exposing the vast and rich cultural heritage of ancient India.

It has serial number 6744 and can be found on page . (read on archive.org)

Sanskrit is the oldest living language and bears testimony to the intellectual past of ancient India. Three major religions (Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism) share this language, which is used for many of their holy books. Besides religious manuscripts, much of India’s ancient culture has been preserved in Sanskrit, covering topics such as Architecture, Music, Botany, Surgery, Ethics, Philosophy, Dance and much more.

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