Grammatical analysis of Sanskrit segment
Analysis of “ceśe”
Note: this is an experimental feature and shows only the first possible analysis of the sentence. If the system was successful in translating the segment, 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.
Grammatical analysis of the Sanskrit text: “ceśe”—
- ce -
-
ca (indeclinable conjunction)[indeclinable conjunction]ca (noun, masculine)[compound], [vocative single], [locative single]ca (noun, neuter)[compound], [nominative dual], [vocative single], [vocative dual], [accusative dual], [locative single]cā (noun, feminine)[nominative single], [nominative dual], [vocative single], [vocative dual], [accusative dual]
- īśe -
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īśa (noun, masculine)[locative single]īśa (noun, neuter)[nominative dual], [vocative dual], [accusative dual], [locative single]īśā (noun, feminine)[nominative dual], [vocative single], [vocative dual], [accusative dual]īś (noun, masculine)[dative single]√īś (verb class 2)[present middle first single], [perfect middle first single], [perfect middle third single]
Extracted glossary definitions: Isha, Ish
Alternative transliteration: ceshe, cese, [Devanagari/Hindi] चेशे, [Bengali] চেশে, [Gujarati] ચેશે, [Kannada] ಚೇಶೇ, [Malayalam] ചേശേ, [Telugu] చేశే
Sanskrit References
“ceśe” in the Sanskrit language represents a word or a combination of words (such as Nouns, Adjectives, Pronouns, etc.). This section shows references to Sanskrit literature where this segment of Sanskrit text occurs, by literally searching for this piece of text.
Lakshminarayana Samhita [sanskrit] (by Shwetayan Vyas)
Verse 1.7.37 < [Chapter 7]
Verse 1.191.58 < [Chapter 191]
Verse 1.382.105 < [Chapter 382]
Verse 2.113.13 < [Chapter 113]
Verse 2.220.61 < [Chapter 220]
Verse 1.31.15 < [Chapter 31]
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