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21 भट्टारक
bhaṭṭārakam. a great lord, venerable orᅠ worshipful person (used of gods andᅠ of great orᅠ learned men, esp. of Buddhist teachers andᅠ of a partic. class of Ṡaiva monks) Inscr. Vet. Hit. etc.;
(in dram.) a king W. ;
the sun ib. ;
Ardea Nivea L. ;
( ikā) f. « noble lady» orᅠ « tutelary deity»
N. of Durgā Vet. (cf. jayā- andᅠ mahā-bhaṭṭārikā);
a king's mother (in the plays) L. ;
mf ( ikā)n. venerable L. ;
- भट्टारकमठ
- भट्टारकवार
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22 मुख्य
múkhya
being at the head orᅠ at the beginning, first, principal, chief, eminent (ifc. = the first orᅠ best orᅠ chief among, rarely = mukha orᅠ ādi q.v.) TS. etc. etc.;
m. a leader, guide Kām. ;
N. of a tutelary deity (presiding over one of the 81 orᅠ 63 divisions orᅠ Padas of an astrological house) VarBṛS. Hcat. ;
pl. a class of gods under Manu Sāvarṇi Pur. ;
(ā) f. N. of the residence of Varuṇa VP. ;
n. an essential rite W. ;
reading orᅠ teaching the Vedas ib. ;
the month reckoned from new moon to new moon ib. ;
moustache Gal
- मुख्यचन्द्र
- मुख्यतस्
- मुख्यता
- मुख्यत्व
- मुख्यनृप
- मुख्यमन्त्रिन्
- मुख्यराज्
- मुख्यराजन्
- मुख्यशस्
- मुख्यसद्रिश
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23 божество
god, monad; ( кумир) idolбожества речных вод [источников] — water gods
верховное [главное] божество языческой религии — the All-father
морское божество миф. — sea [water] god
покровительствующее божество — tutelary (deity), guardian spirit
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24 Agricola
1.agrĭcŏla, ae, m. (Lucr. has gen. plur. agricolūm in 4, 586, but reg. form in 2, 1161; 6, 1260) [ager-colo], a cultivator of land, in the widest sense, a husbandman, agriculturist (including even the vine-dresser, gardener; also one who takes pleasure in agriculture, etc.); or in a more limited sense, a farmer, ploughman, countryman, boor, peasant.I.Prop.:II.bonum agricolam laudabant,
Cato, R. R. 1, 2:agricolae assidui,
Cic. Rosc. Am. 16:(Deiotarus) optimus paterfamilias et diligentissimus agricola et pecuarius,
devoted to agriculture and cattlebreeding, id. Deiot. 9:sed venio ad agricolas,
the farmers, id. Sen. 16:agricolam laudat juris peritus,
Hor. S. 1, 1, 9:invisum agricolis sidus,
id. ib. 1, 7, 26:sollers,
Nep. Cat. 3:peritissimus,
Col. R. R. 1, 11, 1:fortunati,
Verg. G. 2, 468:indomiti,
id. A. 7, 521:parvo beati,
Hor. Ep. 1, 2, 139:negotiosi,
Col. R. R. 9, 2, 5:severi,
Lucr. 5, 1356:miseri,
Verg. A. 12, 292; Vulg. Gen. 4, 2; ib. Jacob. 5, 7.—Of the vine-dresser, keeper of a vineyard:locavit eam (vineam) agricolis,
Vulg. Matt. 21, 33; ib. Joan. 15, 1.— Hence,Meton., of the gods, patrons, tutelary deities of agriculture, as Ceres, Bacchus, Faunus, etc.:2.agricolarum duces di,
Varr. R. R. 1, 1, 4:Redditur agricolis gratia caelitibus,
Tib. 2, 1, 36.Agrĭcŏla, ae, m., a Roman proper name: Cn. Julius, a celebrated Roman commander, father-in-law of Tacitus, who wrote his life, v. Tac. Agr. -
25 agricola
1.agrĭcŏla, ae, m. (Lucr. has gen. plur. agricolūm in 4, 586, but reg. form in 2, 1161; 6, 1260) [ager-colo], a cultivator of land, in the widest sense, a husbandman, agriculturist (including even the vine-dresser, gardener; also one who takes pleasure in agriculture, etc.); or in a more limited sense, a farmer, ploughman, countryman, boor, peasant.I.Prop.:II.bonum agricolam laudabant,
Cato, R. R. 1, 2:agricolae assidui,
Cic. Rosc. Am. 16:(Deiotarus) optimus paterfamilias et diligentissimus agricola et pecuarius,
devoted to agriculture and cattlebreeding, id. Deiot. 9:sed venio ad agricolas,
the farmers, id. Sen. 16:agricolam laudat juris peritus,
Hor. S. 1, 1, 9:invisum agricolis sidus,
id. ib. 1, 7, 26:sollers,
Nep. Cat. 3:peritissimus,
Col. R. R. 1, 11, 1:fortunati,
Verg. G. 2, 468:indomiti,
id. A. 7, 521:parvo beati,
Hor. Ep. 1, 2, 139:negotiosi,
Col. R. R. 9, 2, 5:severi,
Lucr. 5, 1356:miseri,
Verg. A. 12, 292; Vulg. Gen. 4, 2; ib. Jacob. 5, 7.—Of the vine-dresser, keeper of a vineyard:locavit eam (vineam) agricolis,
Vulg. Matt. 21, 33; ib. Joan. 15, 1.— Hence,Meton., of the gods, patrons, tutelary deities of agriculture, as Ceres, Bacchus, Faunus, etc.:2.agricolarum duces di,
Varr. R. R. 1, 1, 4:Redditur agricolis gratia caelitibus,
Tib. 2, 1, 36.Agrĭcŏla, ae, m., a Roman proper name: Cn. Julius, a celebrated Roman commander, father-in-law of Tacitus, who wrote his life, v. Tac. Agr. -
26 Cabiri
Căbīri, ōrum, m., = Kabeiroi (v. Liddell and Scott, s.v.), the Cabiri, deities worshipped by the Pelasgi as tutelary geniì, in whose honor mysteries were celebrated at Lemnos and Samothrace; originally attendants of the great gods (dei magni and potes, Varr. L. L. 5, 10, 18); they were afterwards identified with these, and, with the Dioscuri, worshipped as guardian spirits (cf. Samothraces, s.v. Samothracia): celsa Cabirūm Delubra tenes, Att. ap. Varr. L. L. 7, § 11 Müll. (Trag. Rel. v. 526 Rib.).— Sing.:Cabiro patre,
Cic. N. D. 3, 23, 58; Lact. 1, 15, 8. -
27 Διόσκουροι
Διόσκουροι, ων, οἱ fr. Δίος κοῦροι ‘Sons of Zeus’ (Hom., Pind. et al.; ins; pap, e.g. BGU 248, 13 [I A.D.]; Mayser 10f; B-D-F §30, 3; Rob. 199—Ionic form) the Dioscuri title (first used in IG 359 and then Hom. Hymns 33, 1) of Castor and Pollux (Πολυδεύκη), twin sons of Zeus and Leda, serving as insignia and also tutelary deities (οἱ σωτῆρες ‘the Savior Gods’ IG XII/3, 422 et al.; on their temple and epiphanies at Rome s. Dionys. Hal. 6, 13) of an Alexandrian ship Ac 28:11 (cp. Lucian, Navig. 9; Epict. 2, 18, 29; Ael. Aristid. 43, 26 K.=1 p. 10 D.: Δ. σῴζουσι τοὺς πλέοντας et al.).—AFurtwängler, art. ‘Dioskuren’, in Roscher, I 1154–77; RHarris, The Cult of the Heavenly Twins, 1906; KJaisle, D. Dioskuren als Retter z. See, diss. Tüb. 1907; ACook, Zeus, 1914, I 760–75; LFarnell, Greek Hero Cults, 1921, pp. 175–233; Kl. Pauly II 92–94; RAC III 1122–38—DDD. DELG s.v. Ζεύ. M-M.
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