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The corpus record — Sanskrit

atigrahā

atigrah to take beyond or over the usual measure, ŚBr. ; TBr. ; ŚāṅkhŚr. ; to surpass, Pāṇ. v, 4, 46 , Sch.

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What it meant — Monier-Williams

1. َتِغرَه

atigrah to take beyond or over the usual measure, ŚBr. ; TBr. ; ŚāṅkhŚr. ; to surpass, Pāṇ. v, 4, 46 , Sch.

2. َتِغرَهَ

atigraha m. act of taking over or beyond surpassing, one who takes or seizes to an extraordinary extent, (in phil. ) = atigrāha.

3. atigrāha

atigrāha m. the object of a graha ( q.v. ) or organ of apprehension (these are eight, and their corresponding atigrahas or objects, are apāna, ‘fragrant substance’; nāman ‘name’; rasa ‘flavour’; rūpa ‘form’; sabda ‘sound’; kāma ‘desire’; karman ‘action’; sparśa ‘touch’), ŚBr. xiv.

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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.