མཐར་འགྲོ་ཞོན་: Difference between revisions

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{{Dictkey|མཐར་འགྲོ་ཞོན།}} ([[Wyl.]] ''mthar 'gro zhon '') {{Color|#808080|''Pron.:'' tar dro shyön}}
{{Dictkey|མཐར་འགྲོ་ཞོན།}} ([[Wyl.]] ''mthar 'gro zhon '') {{Color|#808080|''Pron.:'' tar dro shyön}}
* ''Skt.'' शालिवाहनः, śālivāhana, {{Color|#006060|''Pron.:'' shalivahana}}. From {{Color|#006060|''Sanskrit:''}} N. of a celebrated sovereign of India (said to be so called either from having ridden on a Yaksha called Śāli, or from Śalī for Śāla, the Śāl tree, Śāli-vāhana being represented as borne on a cross made of that or other wood | he was the enemy of Vikramāditya and institutor of the era now called Śaka | his capital was Pratishṭhāna on the Godāvarī {{Context|[[:Category:Mahavyutpatti|Mahavyutpatti]]}} {{Context|[[:Category:Sanskrit|Sanskrit]]}} {{Dictref|[[MVP]]}} {{Dictref|[[MW]]}}
* ''Skt.'' शालिवाहनः, śālivāhana, {{Color|#006060|''Pron.:'' shalivahana}}. From {{Color|#006060|''Sanskrit:''}} N. of a celebrated sovereign of India (said to be so called either from having ridden on a Yaksha called Śāli, or from Śalī for Śāla, the Śāl tree, Śāli-vāhana being represented as borne on a cross made of that or other wood | he was the enemy of Vikramāditya and institutor of the era now called Śaka | his capital was Pratishṭhāna on the Godāvarī {{Context|[[:Category:Mahavyutpatti|Mahavyutpatti]]}} {{Context|[[:Category:Sanskrit|Sanskrit]]}} {{Dictref|[[MVP]]}} {{Dictref|[[MW]]}}
[[Category:Mahavyutpatti]][[Category:Sanskrit]][[Category:Monier-Williams]]
[[Category:Tibetan-English Dictionary]][[Category:Mahavyutpatti]][[Category:Sanskrit]][[Category:Monier-Williams]]

Latest revision as of 16:14, 13 March 2011

མཐར་འགྲོ་ཞོན། (Wyl. mthar 'gro zhon ) Pron.: tar dro shyön

  • Skt. शालिवाहनः, śālivāhana, Pron.: shalivahana. From Sanskrit: N. of a celebrated sovereign of India (said to be so called either from having ridden on a Yaksha called Śāli, or from Śalī for Śāla, the Śāl tree, Śāli-vāhana being represented as borne on a cross made of that or other wood | he was the enemy of Vikramāditya and institutor of the era now called Śaka | his capital was Pratishṭhāna on the Godāvarī [Mahavyutpatti] [Sanskrit] MVP MW