Grammatical analysis of Sanskrit segment
Analysis of “rakṣa”
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: “rakṣa”—
- rakṣa -
-
rakṣa (noun, masculine)[compound], [vocative single]rakṣa (noun, neuter)[compound], [vocative single]√rakṣ (verb class 1)[imperative active second single]
Extracted glossary definitions: Raksha
Alternative transliteration: raksha, raksa, [Devanagari/Hindi] रक्ष, [Bengali] রক্ষ, [Gujarati] રક્ષ, [Kannada] ರಕ್ಷ, [Malayalam] രക്ഷ, [Telugu] రక్ష
Sanskrit References
“rakṣa” 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 21 pages. Showing most relevant pages first:
Chapter 18 - The Buddha in mother's womb
Chapter 42 - Precautions of Śuddhodana
Chapter 45 - Siddhārtha's renunciation
Chapter 60 - Village girls and boys
Chapter 61 - The five attendants desert
Chapter 120 - The four small ones
Chapter 137 - Upālin, the barber
Chapter 174 - Yaśodharā brings forth a son
Chapter 175 - The story of the great thief
Chapter 204 - Devadatta visits the Buddha and departs indignant
Chapter 205 - The Buddha assembles the monks
Chapter 219 - The story of Mahendrasena
Chapter 224 - The story of the king Śibi
Chapter 245 - Ajātaśatru casts his father in prison, there to die of hunger
Chapter 250 - Devadatta has himself gilt by gold
Chapter 266 - The story of Sūryanemi the poet
Chapter 315 - Śāriputra and Maudgalyāyana descend to hell to visit and comfort Devadatta
If you like this tool, please consider donating: (Why?)