முதன்மை உள்ளடக்கத்திற்குச் செல்

இடுகைகள்

 Lion Cultural depictions of lions are known in countries of Afro-Eurasia. The lion has been an important symbol to humans for tens of thousands of years. The earliest graphic representations feature lions as organized hunters with great strength, strategies, and skills. In later depictions of human cultural ceremonies, lions were often used symbolically and may have played significant roles in magic, as deities or close association with deities, and served as intermediaries and clan identities. Depictions of lions in other cultures resembled this and all changed into more supportive roles as human figures began to be portrayed as deities. Similar imagery persisted and was retained through cultural changes, sometimes unchanged. Adoptions of lion imagery as symbols into other cultures without direct contact with lions could be very imaginative, often lacking accurate anatomical details or creating unrealistic characteristics. The association of lions with virtues and character traits wa
சமீபத்திய இடுகைகள்
Pāvai nōṇbu Pāvai nōṇbu/Pāvai nōmbu (Mārgaḻi nōṇbu) is a month-long vrata observed during the Tamil month of Mārgaḻi or Margali masam. Pāvai nōṇbu starts on 16 December 2022 and ends on 14 January (30 days). Mainly the nōṇbu is for virgin girls who want to get good husbands and pleasant married life. It is believed that Andal was performed the nōṇbu to get the Lord Vishnu as her husband. Some devotees believe that Gopis, the cowherd girls, were influenced by Pāvai nōṇbu and started to perform Katyayani (Uma) vrata. Pāvai nōṇbu is observed as Dhanurmasa Vratham in Andhra Pradesh and Telangana. ThirupPāvai is the sacred text recited during Dhanurmasa vratham. Dhanurmasam is one of the most auspicious months for Vaishnavas. We know that the girls-play was an important component of the nōṇbu. They were not mature enough to understand the religious aspect of it. They were only habituated to performing that nōṇbu every year, until they grew old enough to transform it into prayers for a good
  Etymology of Greek work denoting 'to ask/beg' Ancient Greeks had trade and cultural relationship with Tamil people. இர²-த்தல் ( ira-) [Tamil] v. tr. 1. To beg alms, solicit aid, seek livelihood by begging; யாசித்தல். இரத்து முயிர்வாழ்தல் வேண் டின் (குறள் , 1062). 2. To pray, beseech, entreat, solicit; வேண்டுதல். இனியுன்னை யென்னிரக்கேனே (திருவாச. 22 , 5).       ಎರೆ ( ere) [Kannada]to beg, to ask, to solicit       ഇരക്കുക ( irakkuka) [Malayalam] To beg, ഇ രന്നുണ്ടതു Pay. ഇരന്നു നടക്ക to ask alms; with Soc. രാജ്യം നിന്നോടിരന്നുകൊണ്ടു Bhr.; also Acc. നിന്നെ ഞാന്‍ വന്നിരക്കുന്നു KR. തൊഴു തിരക്കുന്നേന്‍ KR 2. to beg hard. യുദ്ധം ഇരന്നു CC. called out. VN. ഇരപ്പ് 1. begging. ആ ദേശത്തിരപ്പില്ല. beggarly ഇരപ്പുകാര്യം.        ಎರಪು  ( erapu) [Kannada] that which is asked for (object of solicitation)   இரவு² ( iravu) [Tamil] n. Beggary, mendicity; யாசிக்கை. கோலொடு நின்றா னிரவு (குறள் , 552).        ಎರವು   ( eravu) [Kannada] (n.)   thing borrowed for temporary use, as a bo

Etymology : Bed, Mat, Mattress

  மெத்தை¹ ( mettai) n. 1. Bed, cushion; படுக்கை. ஒரு பாம்பை மெத்தையாக விரித்து (திவ். பெரியாழ். 5 , 1 , 7). 2. Quilt stuffed with cotton; பஞ்சணை. 3. Sleeping place; துயிலிடம். (திவா.) 4. Coat, jacket; சட்டை. (பிங்.) 5. A hunting accessory carried on the shoulder; வேட்டையாடும்போது தோளிலிடும் சாதனம். வலத்தோளிலே இட்ட மெத் தையும் (திவ். திருநெடுந். 21 , வ்யா. பக். 170).   mitá ( מיטה \ מִטָּה ) [Hebrew] a bed   mite ( מיטה ) [Yiddish] bed, especially one upon which a corpse is placed   motta [Icelandic] rug, mat   matta [Latin] A mat made of rushes   mata [Catalan] bush, mastic (tree), thicket. "mat-like growth of plants".   meatte, matte, meatta, meatt, matt [Old English] mat   matte [Middle English]   mat [English] 1. A flat piece of coarse material used for wiping one’s feet, or as a decorative or protective floor covering. 2. A small flat piece of material used to protect a surface from anything hot or rough; a coaster. 3. ( athletics) A floo