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Dream Dictionary Grammar | A Wisdom Archive on Dream Dictionary Grammar |  | Dream Dictionary Grammar A selection of articles related to Dream Dictionary Grammar |  |
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ARTICLES RELATED TO Dream Dictionary Grammar | |
 |  |  | Dream Dictionary Grammar:
Dream Dictionary - Grammar
Grammar - To dream that you are studying grammar, denotes you are soon to make a wise choice in momentous opportunities.
Source: 10 000 Dream
Interpretations, by Gustavus Hindman Miller
(See also: Dream
Archives, Meaning of Dreams, Dream Interpretation, Dream Dictionary, Dream Dictionary - Grammar , Meaning of Dreams about Grammar ,
Dream Interpretation Grammar )
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 |  |  | Dream Dictionary Grammar: Zero To Infinity In Indian Mysticism
Ananta is Sanskrit for infinity. It is equated with the Supreme Brahman - infinitely powerful and so infinitely free. It is bigger than any quantity that can be imagined; it is bigger than any finite number. Infinity is one of the fundamental axioms upon which contemporary mathematics is based. Sanskrit grammar and interpretation in ancient India were closely linked to the handling of high value numbers. Studies relating to poetry and metrics initiated sastragnaas or scientists to both arithmetic and grammar. Grammarians were just as competent at calculations as professional mathematicians. Indian sastragnaas or scientists, philosophers, astronomers and cosmographers - in order to develop their arithmetical, metaphysical and cosmological speculations concerning ever higher numbers - became at once mathematicians, grammarians and poets.
(See also: Infinity , God and Religion,
Peace on Earth, Peace of Mind, Love and Happiness, Life and Beyond, Body Mind
and Soul)
Read more here: » Infinity: Zero To Infinity In Indian Mysticism |
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Spiritual - Theosophy
Dictionary on
Panini
Panini (Sanskrit) The most eminent of all Sanskrit grammarians of whatever age, the author of the Ashtadhyayi, Paniniya, and several other works. Panini was considered a rishi who received his inspiration from the god Siva. Orientalists are not certain in what epoch he lived, some guessing 600 BC, others about 300 AD; he is said to have been born in Salatura in Gandhara, an Indian district west of the Indus. His grammar is composed in the form of 3,996 slokas or sutras arranged in eight chapters, the aphorisms extremely brief, and long study is often required in order to ascertain Panini's meanings. Grammar with him was a science studied for its own sake, and investigated with the most minute criticism.
(See also: Panini , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)
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 |  |  | Dream Dictionary Grammar:
Mysticism
Magick Dictionary
on
LANGUAGE
LANGUAGE Maurice Nicoll in Living Time says: "We communicate badly, partly because we never notice how we are doing it, and partly because it is an extremely difficult matter to communicate anything save the simplest observations, without the danger of our signals being misinterpreted. Also, as often as not, we do not exactly know what it is we are trying to communicate. Finally, nearly everything of importance cannot be expressed." Since this is so, doesn't it stand to reason that we should devote a good deal more time to language than we do? And since the more tongues we learn the better we understand our own, shouldn't learning other languages have a high priority? Part of the teaching we should impart to our chelas is never to stop struggling with language, recognizing that it must always be welcomed as a challenge. In every M/magic(k)al community - whether in a sophisticated modern city or in the midst of a Stone Age tribe, the magician is always the one who knows the longest words and can use them. What is a "spell", after all? What is gematria, but an attempt to dissect words and rebuild them? A "grimoire" was originally a "grammar." "Vedanta" is actually the "grammar" of the Sanskrit Vedas! As we begin to understand more about the Past and the necessity to turn back to it, we see that language looms larger and larger in human consciousness. The ancients understood what we have forgotten - birds fly and lions predate, but language is what man does. It is language that lies behind everything we make, which is why the word "poet" derives from a Greek word meaning "one who makes," the most important thing being, for the Greeks, to make words and which is why in the bible it is said, "In the beginning was the word." Words, like all things that are made, come out of the Void, magically. And words come before the thing! A spider may weave a web but it is always the same web built on the same blueprint resident in her instincts, no different from the eggs she lays instinctively. Compare that to the variety of human works! By the same token, the man who has no language is not just a spider that can't weave webs. He is a frog that can't leap, a seal that can't swim, a deer that can't run. The reason Latin, Greek and Sanskrit are hard to learn is that they are ancient tongues and our linguistically-diminished consciousness is no longer able to deal with convolutions of thought and esoteric syntax. Nevertheless, it's still true that if you really want to understand Plato or the author of Genesis you must learn Ancient Greek and Hebrew. There was a time when English also used conjugations and declensions as highly structured as Latin. Today we can barely translate Shakespeare. The progress of language always mirrors the deterioration of the human spirit and moves downward from difficult to easy. And in return, as language decays it brings civilization down with it. Already it's virtually impossible for all but a handful of scholars in the world even to attempt to master anything bizarre, like Babylonian cuneiform or Mayan hieroglyphs - although a century ago, when all well-educated people knew Latin and Greek, such studies, had the material been available, would have been relatively common. If the day ever comes that we should actually encounter an extraterrestrial civilization, we will discover to our dismay that our technology is useless. Because we have lost our sense of language, to attempt to learn what they are saying may be completely beyond our capacity. We've traded communication for the ease of machines.
(See
also: LANGUAGE , Magick, Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Body Mind
and Soul,)
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 |  |  | Dream Dictionary Grammar: : Dreams Sitemap I - G
This is a sitemap for Dream
Dictionary - G . Click on a link
and you will find multiple dream interpretations and the meaning behind this
particular dream.
Dream Dictionary - G gaiter, gallows, gambling, gambling-house, game, games, gangrene, gaol, garage, garbage, garden, garlic, garnet, garret, garter, gas lamps, gasoline, gasoline, gate, gauze, gavel, geese, gems, gems, genealogical tree, genitals, geography, ghost, ghosts, giant, gift, gifts, gig, girdle, girl scout, girlfriend, girls, gita, glacier, glass, glass house, glass-blower, glasses, gleaning, gloomy, glove, gloves, goal, goat, goblet, god, goddess, gods, goggles, gold, gold leaves, goldfish, golf, gong, gooseberries, gorge, gorilla, gossip, gout, gown, grain, grammar, gramophone, grandchild, grandfather, grandmother, grandparents, grapes, grass, grasshopper, grave, gravel, graveyard, gravy, gray, grease, greek, green, greyhound, grindstone, groans, groceries, grotto, guardian, guiding spirits and evil spirits, guitar, gulls, gun, guns, gutter, gymnast, gypsy,
More about dreams here:
Dream Dictionary
Dream Dictionary
- A, Dream
Dictionary - B, Dream Dictionary
- C,
Dream
Dictionary - D, Dream Dictionary
- E , Dream
Dictionary - F,
Dream
Dictionary - G, Dream Dictionary
- H, Dream
Dictionary - I,
Dream
Dictionary - J, Dream Dictionary
- K, Dream
Dictionary - L,
Dream
Dictionary - M, Dream Dictionary
- N, Dream
Dictionary - O,
Dream Dictionary
- P, Dream
Dictionary - Q, Dream Dictionary
- R,
Dream
Dictionary - S, Dream Dictionary
- T, Dream
Dictionary - U,
Dream
Dictionary - V, Dream Dictionary
- W, Dream
Dictionary - X,
Dream
Dictionary - Y, Dream Dictionary
- Z
Also see these pages:
Hinduism
Dictionary , Buddhism
Dictionary, Spiritual
Dictionary, Sanskrit
Dictionary , Parapsychology
Dictionary, Paganism
Dictionary, Mysticism
Dictionary , Theosophy
Dictionary , Alternative
Health Dictionary
Read more here: » Dreams Sitemap I - G |
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 |  |  | Dream Dictionary Grammar: Vasthu in The
VedasVasthu
in The Vedas
Each Veda has a
subsidiary: ayurveda (knowledge of life) for rgveda, dhanurveda (knowledge of
tools and weapon) for yajurveda, gandharvaveda (knowledge of arts) for samaveda
and sthapatyaveda (architecture) for atharvaveda. In addition, puranas,
nyayasastras, mimamsas and dharma sastras (smrtis) are also considered as
upangas. Sthapatyaveda which is the subsidiary of atharvaveda is the subject of
this discussion. Because it is the subsidiary of Veda, its authority is clear
and undisputed.
Read more here: » Vastu Shastra: Vasthu in The
Vedas |
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 |  |  | Dream Dictionary Grammar:
Hindu -
Hinduism Dictionary on Shruti
shruti: (Sanskrit) "That which is heard." Hinduism's revealed scriptures, of supreme theological authority and spiritual value. They are timeless teachings transmitted to rishis, or seers, directly by God thousands of years ago. Shruti is thus said to be apaurusheya, "impersonal," or rather "suprahuman." Shruti consists essentially of the Vedas and the Agamas, preserved initially through oral tradition and eventually written down in Sanskrit. Among the many sacred books of the Hindus, these two bodies of knowledge are held in the highest esteem. For countless centuries shruti has been the basis of philosophical discussion, study and commentary, and this attention has given rise to countless schools of thought. It is also the subject of deep study and meditation, to realize the wisdom of the ancients within oneself. Most mantras are drawn from shruti, used for rites of worship, both public and domestic, as well as personal prayer and japa. It is a remarkable tribute to Hindu culture that so much of shruti was preserved for thousands of years without alteration by means of oral instruction from guru to shishya, generation after generation. In the Veda tradition this was accomplished by requiring the student to learn each verse in eleven different ways, including backwards. Traditionally shruti is not read, but chanted according to extremely precise rules of grammar, pitch, intonation and rhythm. This brings forth its greatest power. In the sacred language of shruti, word and meaning are so closely aligned that hearing these holy scriptures properly chanted is magical in its effect upon the soul of the listener. See: Agamas, smriti, Vedas.
(See
also: Shruti ,
Hinduism,
Body Mind and Soul)
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 |  |  | Dream Dictionary Grammar: Reinterpreting Vaastu In
India we must be grateful that the core beliefs, theoretical rigour and
application of the Vaastu Shastras are still
available, though in a depleted form. From the study of texts, dialogues with
practitioners and field application of the concepts I have been able to
reconstruct the overview of the Vaastu Shilpa Shastras and
give a guideline for present day application. There is a great deal of
resistance and deep feelings of distrust from the trained designers in the
'modern institutesÕ toward the assumptions and symbolism of the traditional
paradigm. It is almost as if they feel threatened that their hegemony would be
displaced. Are their fears valid? Is the basis of the Vaastu Shastras questionable
in its present day application? Is it a meaningless mumbo jumbo in the
'scientificÕ climate of today?
Read more here: » Vaastu Shastra: Reinterpreting Vaastu |
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 |  |  | Dream Dictionary Grammar: Vedas As A Guide To Good Living
The Vedas contain revelations of the eternal Truth. The culture of a community or a nation is derived from the values that people live and uphold in their lives. The word Veda is derived from the Sanskrit vid , to know. They contain knowledge in every field of worldly science , under the following broad headings - the sadangas or six limbs: Siksa or phonetics, kalpa or the code of rituals, vyakarana or grammar, nirukta or etymology, chandas or literature, and jyotish or astronomy. Along with these, four upvedas o r subvedas consist of the four sciences: Ayurveda or medicine, dhanurveda or new archery, gandharvaveda or music and sthapatyaveda or architecture
(See also: Vedas , God and Religion,
Peace on Earth, Peace of Mind, Love and Happiness, Life and Beyond, Body Mind
and Soul)
Read more here: » Vedas: Vedas As A Guide To Good Living |
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 |  |  | Dream Dictionary Grammar: A
Recipe for Bliss We are unborn
and formless. Our true nature is everlasting consciousness, not form. We may
appear to be a solitary, physical being, mysteriously extracted from Spirit,
separate and vulnerable... but we are not what we "appear" to be. We
are visiting a world of form to make a discovery. We have come here to uncover
a mystery that has plagued our consciousness for a time that curiously predates
our present memory. We are here for a reason... to find out exactly who we
are... and to experience bliss.
An
excerpt from the book "A Recipe for Bliss" by Carl Schmidt.
Read more here: » Bliss: A
Recipe for Bliss |
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 |  |  | Dream Dictionary Grammar:
Spiritual - Theosophy
Dictionary on
Patanjali
Patanjali (Sanskrit) [from pata fallen + anjali palm] The founder of Yoga philosophy, also considered by many to have been the author of the Mahabhashya, a celebrated commentary on the Grammar of Panini. His date is assigned by some scholars as around 700 BC, and tradition considers him a contemporary of Panini.
(See also: Patanjali , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)
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Hindu -
Hinduism Dictionary on Sutra
sutra: (Sanskrit) "Thread." An aphoristic verse; the literary style consisting of such maxims. From 500 bce, this style was widely adopted by Indian philosophical systems and eventually employed in works on law, grammar, medicine, poetry, crafts, etc. Each sutra is often accompanied by a commentary called bhashya and sometimes subcommentary called tika, vyakhyana or tippani. Through the media of short, concise, easily memorized sutras, vast amounts of knowledge were preserved. Reciting relevant sutra texts from memory is a daily sadhana in various Hindu arts and sciences. Sutra also names the wife's wedding pendant (mangala sutra). See: bhashya, wedding pendant.
(See
also: Sutra ,
Hinduism,
Body Mind and Soul)
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