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mendicant Meaning in Odia (Oriya). ( mendicant ଶବ୍ଦର ଓଡିଆ ଅର୍ଥ)



, ଭିକାରୀ ମାଙ୍କଡ଼, ଭିକାରୀ,

Noun:

ଗରିବ, ପଶୁପାଳନ, ଭିକାରୀ |,

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mendicant's Usage Examples:

The epithet ‘Bairagi’ for this idol is derived from the fact that when ‘alankara’ (flower decoration) is done to the deity, the deity looks like a Bairagi (mendicant).


of Taklakot (Purang) in Tibet and used since ancient times by traders, mendicants and pilgrims transiting between India and Tibet.


30 CE) was a Jewish merchant and mendicant proselytizer, probably of Hellenistic origin, who, in the opening years of the common.


Animated by the ideals of the vita apostolica—the same ideals that led to the formation of the mendicant orders—Beguines pursued a life of contemplative prayer and active service in the world.


Ravana has come to her in the form of a mendicant and Sita tells him that he does not look like one.


Both texts mention four types of mendicants with nearly identical life styles.


long-standing custom for mendicant ascetics in India not to travel during the rainy season as they may unintentionally harm crops, insects or even themselves.


By Scott"s time the term bedesman was synonymous with beggar or mendicant.


practice is mental worship (bhāva-pūjā), which is already performed by mendicants, because the reliance on images and temples is indicative of an attachment.


and a member of one of the mendicant orders founded in the twelfth or thirteenth century; the term distinguishes the mendicants" itinerant apostolic character.


Doutte in L"Islam algerien en 1900, "The Darqawa are thus mendicant derviches.


A mendicant (from Latin: mendicans, "begging") is one who practices mendicancy, relying chiefly or exclusively on alms to survive.


In the modern world, padukas are worn as footwear by mendicants and saints of Hinduism, Buddhism, Shavism and Jainism.



Synonyms:

pleading, imploring, beseeching,

Antonyms:

nonreligious person, lend oneself, enrich, imperative,

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