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Sanskrit and scholar
Oxford scholar Noa Ronkin discusses the relation between the skandhas ( Sanskrit ; Pali: khandhas ) and dukkha:
* 1836 – Mahamahopadhyay Pandit Mahesh Chandra Nyayratna Bhattacharyya, CIE, eminent Sanskrit scholar, academic administrator, philanthropist and social reformer ( d. 1906 )
As a comparative grammarian he was much more than as a Sanskrit scholar ,” and yet “ it is surely much that he made the grammar, formerly a maze of Indian subtilty, as simple and attractive as that of Greek or Latin, introduced the study of the easier works of Sanskrit literature and trained ( personally or by his books ) pupils who could advance far higher, invade even the most intricate parts of the literature and make the Vedas intelligible.
* July 8 – Charles Rockwell Lanman, American Sanskrit scholar ( d. 1941 )
* December 6 – Haraprasad Shastri, Indian academic, Sanskrit scholar, archivist and historian of Bengali literature ( d. 1931 )
* December 18 – Heinrich Roth, German Sanskrit scholar ( d. 1668 )
The scholar Iravatham Mahadevan proved that Kannada was already a language of rich oral tradition earlier than 3rd century B. C., and based on the native Kannada words found in Prakrit and Sanskrit inscriptions of that period, Kannada must have been spoken by a widespread and stable populations.
* June 20 – Heinrich Roth, German Sanskrit scholar ( b. 1620 )
The Soyombo script is an abugida created by the Mongolian monk and scholar Bogdo Zanabazar in the late 17th century, that can also be used to write Tibetan and Sanskrit.
His father, Shri Gangadhar Tilak was a famous school teacher and a Sanskrit scholar who died when Tilak was sixteen.
He also met Babu Pramadadas Mitra, the noted Sanskrit scholar, with whom he corresponded on the interpretation of the Hindu scriptures.
Later Vivekananda journeyed to Jaipur, where he studied Panini's Ashtadhyayi with a Sanskrit scholar.
* Maurice Bloomfield ( 1855 – 1928 ), American philologist and Sanskrit scholar
His father, Shyam Shankar, a Middle Temple barrister and scholar who served as dewan of Jhalawar, used the Sanskrit spelling of the family name and removed its last part.
According to Yaska, Sanskrit scholar of the 5th century BCE, who made various attempts to interpret difficult Vedic mythologies in his work Nirukta ( Etymology ) ( 12, 12 ), the time of Savitr ’ s appearance is when darkness has been removed.
Daumal was self-taught in the Sanskrit language and translated some of the Tripitaka Buddhist canon into the French language, as well as translating the literature of the Japanese Zen scholar D. T.
In 1974 the 65-year-old Dr. Eissler met Dr. Jeffrey Moussaieff Masson ( born 1941 ), a 33-year-old Sanskrit scholar and psychoanalyst, at a meeting of the American Psychoanalytic Association.
Xuanzang ( Sanskrit: ह ् व े नस ां ग ) ( c. 596 or 602 – 664 ), born Chen Hui () or Chen Yi (), was a Chinese Buddhist monk, scholar, traveler, and translator who described the interaction between China and India in the early Tang Dynasty.
He also studied Sanskrit under scholar Theodor Benfey at Göttingen.
It was edited by Sanskrit scholar and linguist William Dwight Whitney, with Benjamin Eli Smith's assistance.
Das was a scholar of Sanskrit, from which he added to the body of Hindi language.
There has been great ambiguity regarding the exact date of Kālidāsa but in 1986, Sanskrit scholar Ramchandra Tiwari of Bhopal claims to have conducted a thorough research on Kalidasa and after analysing 627 archaeological evidences which included 104 sculptures, 30 pictures and 493 scriptural words determined that Kalidasa lived in the period 370-450AD
Besides schooling, young Nānu continued to be educated at home, under the guidance of both his father and uncle Krishnan Vaidyan who was a reputed Ayurvedic physician and a Sanskrit scholar, where he was taught the basics of the Tamil and Sanskrit languages and traditional subjects such as Siddharupam, Bālaprobhodhanam and Amarakosam.

Sanskrit and Maurice
* Maurice Bloomfield-Austrian-born U. S. philologist and Sanskrit scholar

Sanskrit and Bloomfield
Bloomfield also studied at Göttingen with Sanskrit specialist Jacob Wackernagel, and considered both Wackernagel and the Sanskrit grammatical tradition of rigorous grammatical analysis associated with Pāṇini as important influences on both his historical and descriptive work.
As part of his training with leading Indo-Europeanists in Germany in 1913-1914 Bloomfield studied the Sanskrit grammatical tradition originating with Pāṇini, who lived in northwestern India during the sixth century B. C.
Subsequently, a wider body of work influenced Sanskrit scholars such as Ferdinand de Saussure, Leonard Bloomfield, and Roman Jakobson.

Sanskrit and referred
For example, rice is first mentioned in the Yajur Veda and then is frequently referred to in Sanskrit texts.
It was hence referred to in Indian, specifically Tamil literature by the Sanskrit name " yāvaka dvīpa " ( dvīpa = island ).
In October 2010, Mercado announced that he would now be referred to as " Shanti Ananda ," a translation in Sanskrit of " peace happiness.
The word Yogi ( Sanskrit: masc, य ो ग ी ; fem ) originally referred in the Classical Sanskrit of the Puranas specifically to a male practitioner of Yoga.
Amrit (; IAST: amṛta ) is a Sanskrit word that literally means " immortality ", and is often referred to in texts as nectar.
The name comes from Avestan Haētumant, literally " dammed, having a dam ", cognate with Sanskrit Setumanta " having a dam ", which referred to the Helmand River and the irrigated areas around it.
He was also sometimes referred to by the names Gaura ( Sanskrit for golden ), due to his fair complexion, and Nimai due to his being born underneath a Neem tree.
Statues of Budai form a central part of I Kuan Tao shrines, where he is usually referred to by the Sanskrit name Maitreya.
Looting ( Hindi lūṭ, akin to Sanskrit luṭhati, steals ; also Latin latro, latronis " thief ")— also referred to as sacking, plundering, despoiling, despoliation, and pillaging — is the indiscriminate taking of goods by force as part of a military or political victory, or during a catastrophe, such as during war, natural disaster, or rioting.
The syllable is also referred to as omkara ( ) or aumkara ( ), literally " om syllable ", and in Sanskrit it is sometimes referred to as (), literally " that which is sounded out loudly ".
In Sanskrit, Avalokitesvara is also referred to as Padmapāni (" Holder of the Lotus ") or Lokeśvara (" Lord of the World ").
* In ancient Sanskrit, the area we now call Southeast Asia ( including both mainland Southeast Asia and the area now known as Maritime Asia ( i. e., Malaysia, Indonesia, and the Philippines )) was referred to by the people of ancient India as Suvarnadvipa, which means Golden island ( suvarna = golden ; dvipa = island ).
A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada, the founder of the International Society for Krishna Consciousness ( ISKCON ) translated the Sanskrit word " deva " as " demigod " in his literature when the term referred to a God other than the Supreme Lord.
This process is referred to in the Yogācāra tradition as " turning about in the basis " ( Sanskrit: āśraya-parāvṛtti ), the basis being the storehouse consciousness.
Their empty-handed fighting system was variously referred to as pahuyuth ( from the Sanskrit bahuyuddha meaning unarmed combat ), dhoi muay ( a cognate of the Malay word tomoi ), or simply muay, a generic term for boxing or pugilism.
Sanskrit and Pali referred to it as Yavadesh and Javadeh, respectively.
There is no word corresponding exactly to the English terms " rebirth ", " metempsychosis ", " transmigration " or " reincarnation " in the traditional Buddhist languages of Pāli and Sanskrit: the entire process of change from one life to the next is called punarbhava ( Sanskrit ) or punabbhava ( Pāli ), literally " becoming again ", or more briefly bhava, " becoming ", while the state one is born into, the individual process of being born or coming into the world in any way, is referred to simply as " birth " ( jāti ).
The Gupta script ( sometimes referred to as Gupta Brahmi Script or Late Brahmi Script ) was used for writing Sanskrit and is associated with the Gupta Empire of India which was a period of material prosperity and great religious and scientific developments.
Sometimes the Peshawar valley and Taxila were collectively referred to as Gandhara and sometimes the Swat valley ( Sanskrit: Suvāstu ) was also included.
It is referred to as Gokanna in Pali or Gokarna in Sanskrit.
Buddhism ( Pali / Sanskrit: ब ौ द ् ध धर ् म Buddha Dharma ) is an ancient ideological system that originated in the Iron Age Indian subcontinent, referred to variously throughout history by one or more of a myriad of concepts – including, but not limited to any of the following: a Dharmic religion, a philosophy or quasi-philosophical tradition, a spiritual schema, or a culturally dynamic psychological method of self-improvement.

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