Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Your mother, “How do you say ‘in Sanskrit?

Uncertainty by snowpealeaf: How do you say “mother” in Sanskrit?

Can you translate “mother” into Sanskrit, and can you recommend a website that can translate English words into Sanskrit?


Thanks!


Truly is top tips on How do you say “mother” in Sanskrit? that you could really need to solve situations themselves. With some luck , this assists in lots of ways, and help make yourself far better. Hoping top tips on How do you say “mother” in Sanskrit? will be a method in the coming years.

Solution:


Answer by Scots Pines

These might help….but are not definitive, I feel …just hope they have a clue here and there for you …


Amma – is mother, in colloquial Indian …

so to call someone Lakshmi Amma, is a sign of great affection …usually spoken by a younger person to a lady who is

quite grown up …not necessarily married


Srimata – is the feminine form of Sri

Sri is reserved for a gentleman, and is a sign of respect for him …. goes before the man’s name, just as in English (Sir ….which amusingly enough is also made of an ‘s’, an ‘r’, and an ‘i’ … sir ~ sri………in some ways they are equal but the Indian carries more meaning … more mysticism ! … refers to the inherent beauty and effulgence of the gentleman…) (I happen to have a lady Indian friend whose first name is Sri, and that is thought to mean “good fortune” …. )


Srimata which is abbreviated as Smt., is reserved for married ladies …


However if you say Sri Mata, it refers to a devi, a goddess …. Jagan Mata, a mother of the universe, a bigger goddess….


xxxxx

Lakshmi Parimala


Answer by wize woman

AMBA–I hope is right; however, I do not know Sanskrit.

bhttp://www.forth.org.ru/~mlg/LangEnc/Language.html#ENGTO-SANin/tamil/recherche

“ambA f. (Ved. voc. %{a4mbe} [VS.]or %{amba} [RV.] , in later Sanskrit %{amba} only , sometimes a mere interjection A1s3vS3r.) , a mother , good woman (as a title of respect) ; N. of a plant ; N. of Durga1 (the wife of S3iva) ; N. of an Apsaras L. ; N. of a daughter of a king of Ka1si MBh. ; N. of one of the seven Kr2ttika1s TS. Ka1t2h. TBr. ; a term in astrol. (to denote the fourth condition which results from the conjunction of planets?). In the South Indian languages , %{ambA} is corrupted into %{ammA} , and is often affixed to the names of goddesses , and females in general [Germ. {Amme} , a nurse ; Old Germ. {amma} , Them. {ammo7n} , {ammU7n}] ,

13 ambAdA or f. mother Pa1n2. 7-3 , 107 Comm. (voc. %{-De} and %{-le}) and Ka1s3. (in Veda voc. optionally %{-Da} and %{la}).

14 ambAlA f. mother Pa1n2. 7-3 , 107 Comm. (voc. %{-De} and %{-le}) and Ka1s3. (in Veda voc. optionally %{-Da”

I hope it helps.


Answer by blueman

I dont know SORRY


Figure out far better?

Add your personal answer at the comments!


Sharon den Adel – “Mother Earth” Ouverture & “Ice Queen”. Night of the Proms (Sportpaleis, Antwerp, Belgium, 2009).


Mother Jones (LOC)


Pic when Mother Jones (LOC)


Bain News Service,, publisher.


Mother Jones


[between ca. 1910 and ca. 1915]


1 negative : glass ; 5 x 7 in. or smaller.


Notes:
Title from unverified data provided by the Bain News Service on the negatives or caption cards.

Forms part of: George Grantham Bain Collection (Library of Congress).


Format: Glass negatives.


Rights Info: No known restrictions on publication.


Repository: Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA, hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print


General information about the Bain Collection is available at hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.ggbain


Higher resolution image is available (Persistent URL): hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/ggbain.15973


Call Number: LC-B2- 3049-6


Your mother, “How do you say ‘in Sanskrit?

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