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Bhagavad Gita · BG 11.30

Sanskrit Word Breakdown & Grammatical Analysis

शब्दार्थ एवं व्याकरण विश्लेषण · श्लोक 11.30

Analyzed Sanskrit Words16
Sanskrit Char Count106
Average Word Length7.3 chars

लेलिह्यसे ग्रसमानः समन्ता ल्लोकान्समग्रान्वदनैर्ज्वलद्भिः। तेजोभिरापूर्य जगत्समग्रं भासस्तवोग्राः प्रतपन्ति विष्णो

lelihyase grasamānaḥ samantāl lokān samagrān vadanair jvaladbhiḥ tejobhir āpūrya jagat samagraṁ bhāsas tavogrāḥ pratapanti viṣhṇo

Word-by-Word Sanskrit to English Meaning

Sanskrit Word (पद)English Breakdown & Meaning
lelihyaseyou are licking
grasamānaḥdevouring
samantāton all sides
lokānworlds
samagrānall
vadanaiḥwith mouths
jvaladbhiḥblazing
tejobhiḥby effulgence
āpūryafilled with
jagatthe universe
samagramall
bhāsaḥrays
tavayour
ugrāḥfierce
pratapantiscorching
viṣhṇoLord Vishnu

Sanskrit Lexical FAQ & Insights

Q: What is the word-by-word Sanskrit meaning of Bhagavad Gita Chapter 11 Verse 30?

In Bhagavad Gita Chapter 11 Verse 30, the Sanskrit words translate literally as: lelihyase translates to "you are licking", grasamānaḥ translates to "devouring", samantāt translates to "on all sides", lokān translates to "worlds"... and so on for all remaining terms in the shlok.

Q: How many Sanskrit words are grammatically analyzed in Gita 11.30?

A total of 16 distinct Sanskrit terms are grammatically parsed and translated in the word breakdown of Gita Chapter 11 Verse 30.

Q: What is the meaning of the Sanskrit term "lelihyase" in Gita 11.30?

In the context of Gita Chapter 11 Verse 30, the word "lelihyase" translates to "you are licking". It forms a key part of the verse's spiritual message.

Significance of Word-by-Word Sanskrit Study

Sanskrit is a highly inflected language where a single compound word (Samasa) can encapsulate profound philosophical concepts. By analyzing each term, seekers can uncover direct layers of meaning that standard poetic translations often miss. For example, words like dharma-kṣhetre and kuru-kṣhetre in verse 1 convey both the external battleground and the internal field of consciousness where righteousness encounters ego.

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