मन्
Sanskrit
Alternative forms
- म्ना (mnā)
Etymology
From Proto-Indo-Iranian *man-, from Proto-Indo-European *men-.
Derived terms
- मति (matí, máti, “thought, idea, belief, mind, worship, memory”)
- मनन (manána, “thoughtful, careful; thinking, reflection, reverence”)
- मनना (mananā́, “thoughtfully, deliberately”)
- मनस (manasá, “mind, heart”)
- मनस् (mánas, “mind”).
- मनस्क (manaská, “little mind”)
- मनस्यु (manasyú, “wishing, desiring”)
- मना (manā́, “devotion, attachment, zeal, envy”)
- मनान (manāná, “pious, devout”)
- मनायु (manāyú, “zealous, devoted, desirous, praying”)
- मनीषा (manīṣā́, “thought, intelligence, concept, prayer, wish”)
- मनु (mánu, “thought”)
- मनुते (manuté, 8 Ā),
- मनुस् (mánus, “man, Manu”)
- मनोजव (manojavá, “the speed or swiftness of thought”)
- मनोतृ (manótṛ, manotṛ́, “inventor, discoverer, disposer, manager”)
- मन्तु (mántu, “advisor, arbiter; counsel; understanding”)
- मन्तृ (mantṛ́, “thinker , adviser , counsellor”)
- मन्त्र (mántra, “formula”)
- मन्त्रि (mantri, “minister, counselor, scholar”)
- मन्त्रिन् (mantrín, “minister, counselor, scholar”)
- मन्धातृ (mandhātṛ́, “a thoughtful or pious man”)
- मन्मन् (mánman, “understanding, intellect, thought, prayer”)
- मन्य (manya, “thinking oneself to be, passing for, appearing as”)
- मन्यते (manyate, passive)
- मन्यते (mányate, 4 Ā),
- मन्यु (manyú, “mind, mood, anger, spirit”)
- मन्युमी (manyumī́, “destroying hostile fury”)
- मन्वन्तर (manvantara, “period or age of a Manu”)
- ममन्धि (mamandhi, 3 P)
- मान (mā́na, “opinion, conception, wish”)
- मानयति (mānayati),
- मानयते (mānayate, causative)
- मीमांसति (mīmāṃsati, desiderative)
- मीमांसते (mīmāṃsate),
- मीमांसा (mīmāṃsā́, desiderative)
- मेधा (medhā́, “wisdom, intelligence”)
- म्ना (√mnā, “remember, repeat in the mind”)
- सुमति (sumati, “of good mind”)
- सुम्न (sumná, “benevolence, grace; devotion, prayer; peace”)
References
- Monier Williams (1899), “मन्”, in A Sanskrit–English Dictionary, […], new edition, Oxford: At the Clarendon Press, OCLC 458052227, page 783.
- William Dwight Whitney, 1885, The Roots, Verb-forms, and Primary Derivatives of the Sanskrit Language, Leipzig: Breitkopf and Härtel, page 118
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