LOGOI

The corpus record — Sanskrit

oṃkāra

oṃkāra (oṃk), m. the sacred and mystical syllable om, the exclamation om, pronouncing the syllable om, Mn. ii, 75 ; 81 ; Kathās. ; Bhag. &c., ( cf. vijayoṃkāra, kṛtoṃkāra)

Every figure on this page is a live query of the corpus record.

Where it lives

  • Mandukya Upanisad 15 · 76.92/10k
  • Prasna Upanisad 2 · 3.06/10k
  • Bhagavad Gita 1 · 1.16/10k
  • Chandogya Upanisad 4 · 0.85/10k

What it meant — Monier-Williams

1. oṃkāra

oṃkāra (oṃk), m. the sacred and mystical syllable om, the exclamation om, pronouncing the syllable om, Mn. ii, 75 ; 81 ; Kathās. ; Bhag. &c., ( cf. vijayoṃkāra, kṛtoṃkāra)

2. oṃkāra

a beginning, prosperous or auspicious beginning of ( e.g. a science), Bālar.

3. oṃkāra

N. of a Liṅga

In the wild

6 of 22 attestations shown.

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.