Grammatical analysis of Sanskrit segment
Analysis of “duḥkhā”
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Grammatical analysis of the Sanskrit text: “duḥkhā”—
- duḥkhā -
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duḥkhā (noun, feminine)[nominative single]
Extracted glossary definitions: Duhkha
Alternative transliteration: duhkha, [Devanagari/Hindi] दुःखा, [Bengali] দুঃখা, [Gujarati] દુઃખા, [Kannada] ದುಃಖಾ, [Malayalam] ദുഃഖാ, [Telugu] దుఃఖా
Sanskrit References
“duḥkhā” 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.
Total 18 pages. Showing most relevant pages first:
Chapter 45 - Siddhārtha's renunciation
Chapter 54 - Self-tortures and fastings
Chapter 57 - The three similes
Chapter 86 - The Budda explains the four Noble Truths
Chapter 101 - The sermon of the Buddha on the unreality of the Self
Chapter 217 - The sichness of the Buddha. The Buddha heals Devadatta
Chapter 224 - The story of the king Śibi
Chapter 227 - The story of Viśvantara
Chapter 250 - Devadatta has himself gilt by gold
Chapter 251 - The story of a crow and a golden cap (suvarṇakholā)
Chapter 252 - Devadatta has in his feet the sign of the wheel imprinted with red hot iron
Chapter 253 - The jackal measuring the step of an elephant with its own
Chapter 257 - The yakṣa Kumbhīra sacrifices his life in trying to arrest the stone
Chapter 272 - The elephant Dhanapālaka follows submissively the Buddha
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