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Bhagavan - Usage |  | Bhagavan - Usage: Encyclopedia II - Bhagavan - Usage |  | The actual word is Bhagavat (भगवत् in Devanagari script, pronounced as "bhəgəvət"), and its nominative singular form under nominal declination is Bhagavān. It literally means "possessing fortune, fortunate" (from the root "Bhaga", meaning fortune, glory) , and hence "glorious, divine, venerable, holy", etc. It is also an epithet of some devas like Vishnu, his incarnation Krishna and Shiva. Other religions like Buddhism and Jainism also use the epithet of Bhagavan before their founders Gautama Buddha and ...
See also:Bhagavan, Bhagavan - Usage, Bhagavan - Early epigraphical evidence, Bhagavan - Devotional Hinduism, Bhagavan - Devotional Buddhism |  | | Bhagavan, Bhagavan - Devotional Buddhism, Bhagavan - Devotional Hinduism, Bhagavan - Early epigraphical evidence, Bhagavan - Usage |  | |
|  |  | Bhagavan: Encyclopedia II - Bhagavan - Usage
Bhagavan - Usage
The actual word is Bhagavat (भगवत् in Devanagari script, pronounced as "bhəgəvət"), and its nominative singular form under nominal declination is Bhagavān. It literally means "possessing fortune, fortunate" (from the root "Bhaga", meaning fortune, glory) , and hence "glorious, divine, venerable, holy", etc. It is also an epithet of some devas like Vishnu, his incarnation Krishna and Shiva. Other religions like Buddhism and Jainism also use the epithet of Bhagavan before their founders Gautama Buddha and Mahavira respectively, but it is not to be confused with the sense of "God", because they are respectively agnostic and atheistic. They use the term in the sense of "Blessed One" or "Venerable". It is also the title of the sacred scripture Gita. Many other gurus in India also use it in a similar sense. The feminine of Bhagavat is Bhagawatī and is an epithet of Durga and many other goddesses.
Bhagwan is a term used to refer to God in Hindi, the principal language of north India . The term usually means the One and the Supreme God (also called Ishvara, the Supreme Lord or Paramatman, the Supreme Spirit) in a quite monotheistic sense. Rarely, the term is also applied as an epithet to some other particular deities or devas like Ganesha, Shiva, Vishnu and Krishna, especially because the Shaivites and the Vaishnavites like to visualize God in the form of Vishnu or Shiva. The term "Hey Bhagwān" is used similarly to "Oh Jesus" or "Oh God".
Bahá'ís in India often refer to Bahá'u'lláh as "Bahá Bhagwan".
The worshippers of a Bhagavat were called Bhāgavata.
Other related archivesAntialcidas, Bahá'u'lláh, Bahá'ís in India, Balarama, Benares, Bhagavad Gita, Bhagavata, Bhagavata Purana, Buddha, Buddhism, Devanagari, Durga, Ganesha, Garuda, Gautama Buddha, Gita, God, Heliodorus pillar, Hindi, IAST, India, Indo-Greek, Ishvara, Jainism, Krishna, Mahavira, Paramatman, Rajneesh, Ramana Maharshi, Sanskrit, Shaivites, Shakyamuni, Shiva, Sunga, Taxila, Theodorus, Vaishnavites, Vishnu, Yona, avatar, devanagari, devas, gurus, kharoshthi, meridarch, nominative, north India, stupa, veneration
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Usage", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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