The corpus record — Sanskrit
akāro
Every figure on this page is a live query of the corpus record.
Where it lives
- Mandukya Upanisad 4 · 20.51/10k
- Prasna Upanisad 1 · 1.53/10k
- Bhagavad Gita 1 · 1.16/10k
- Chandogya Upanisad 1 · 0.21/10k
- Brhadaranyaka Upanisad 1 · 0.13/10k
What it meant
No Monier-Williams entry is recorded for this lemma.
In the wild
- akāro Bhagavad Gita 10.33
- ākāre Brhadaranyaka Upanisad brhup_6,3.2
- akāro Chandogya Upanisad chup_2,24.1
- akāro Mandukya Upanisad mandup_10
- akāro Mandukya Upanisad mandup_12
- akāra Mandukya Upanisad mandup_8
6 of 8 attestations shown.
Where it came from
- Treated in Mayrhofer, Etymologisches Worterbuch des Altindoarischen (EWAia) s.v. akar (vol. 3, scan p. 882; entry #16300).
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Sanskrit corpus record built from GRETIL sources (citations and statistics; GRETIL running text is not redistributable). Passage text, where shown, from the Digital Corpus of Sanskrit (CC BY 4.0). Dictionary senses from Monier-Williams (1899, public domain), via the Cologne Digital Sanskrit Dictionaries.