- used to
translate the
polysemous Buddhist Sanskrit term
śalāka or
śalākā (Pali:
salākā).
śalākā any
small stake or stick, rod (for
stirring [etc]), twig...
- A sālik is a
follower of Sufism, from the verb
salaka which means to
travel or follow,
related to sulūk "pathway". Sulūk here
specifically refers to a...
-
Salakas is a town in
northeastern Lithuania with a po****tion of 519
inhabitants according to the 2011 census. It is
famous for the neo-romantic church...
- work.
Present progressive kele
kusalaka ke
salaka Yandi ke
salaka. He is working. Past
salaka salaka Yandi salaka. He worked.
Immediate past mene sala me...
- A
lamba is the
traditional garment worn by men and
women that live in Madagascar. The textile,
highly emblematic of
Malagasy culture,
consists of a rectangular...
- deity.
Another term used for
consecration in the Jain
tradition is añjana
śalākā, the "eye-opening" rite by
which a
qualified practitioner "enlivens" a murti...
-
words Salaka and purusa. "Purusa"
means person, but "
salaka" is of
ambiguous etymology in this context. The
primary meaning of the word
salaka (Sanskrit:...
- ऋग्वेदी ब्राह्मण घराण्यात ते... Sureśa Mahādeva Ḍoḷake (1983). Sãśodhana-
śalākā.
Ameya Prakashan. p. 6. "WHO IS
SHARAD ARVIND BOBDE".
Business Standard...
- com.
Retrieved July 23, 2011. Doe, J.
Kpanneh (October 31, 2000). "Baa
Salaka:
Sacrificial Lamb – A Book
Review & Commentary". The Perspective. Retrieved...
- Lord
Rishabhanatha is also
detailed in
Mahapurana of Jinasena, Trisasti-
salaka-purusa-caritra by the
scholar Hemachandra,
Kalpa Sutra a Jain text containing...