Lakshminarayana Samhita [sanskrit]

by Shwetayan Vyas | 1,169,834 words | ISBN-10: 8170801818 | ISBN-13: 9788170801818

The Lakshminarayana Samhita verse 1.338.9 (Sanskrit text), including grammatical analysis, glossary and relevant print editions. The Lakshmi-narayana-samhita is an encyclopaedic work devoted to Narayana although it deals with various deities. The work is written in Puranic style and divided into four books according to the four Yugas. This is verse 9 of chapter 338 of Khanda 1 (krita-yuga-santana). In total, the work consists of roughly 120,000 metrical verses.

Verse 1.338.9

स स्नातः सर्वतीर्थेषु सर्वेयज्ञेषु दीक्षितः ।
सर्वयात्रासु दानेषु पुण्यभाक् तुलसीश्रयः ॥ ९ ॥

sa snātaḥ sarvatīrtheṣu sarveyajñeṣu dīkṣitaḥ |
sarvayātrāsu dāneṣu puṇyabhāk tulasīśrayaḥ || 9 ||

The Sanskrit text of Lakshminarayana Samhita Verse 1.338.9 is contained in the book Shri Lakshmi Narayana Samhita by Chowkhamba Sanskrit Series Office. This book is not available online so in order to read the full text and translation you should buy the book:

Buy now! Sanskrit text by Chowkhamba Sanskrit Series Office (2011)

Glossary of Sanskrit terms

Note: This extracts Sanskrit terms and links to English definitions from the glossary, based on an experimental segmentation of verse (1.338.9). Some terms could be superfluous while some might not be mentioned. Click on the word to show English definitions.

Snata, Snat, Sarvatirtha, Sarva, Yajna, Dikshitri, Dikshita, Atra, Dana, Punyabhaj, Tulasi, Shraya,

Analysis of Sanskrit grammar

Note: this is an experimental feature and only shows the first possible analysis of the Sanskrit text (Lakshminarayana Samhita Verse 1.338.9). If the system was successful in segmenting the sentence, you will see of which words it is made up of, generally consisting of Nouns, Pronouns, Verbs, Participles and Indeclinables. Click on the link to show all possible derivations of the word.

  • Line 1: “sa snātaḥ sarvatīrtheṣu sarveyajñeṣu dīkṣitaḥ
  • sa -
  • sa (noun, neuter)
    [compound], [vocative single]
    sa (noun, masculine)
    [nominative single]
  • snātaḥ -
  • snāta (noun, masculine)
    [nominative single]
    snā -> snāta (participle, masculine)
    [nominative single from √snā class 2 verb], [accusative plural from √snā class 2 verb], [ablative single from √snā class 2 verb], [genitive single from √snā class 2 verb], [nominative single from √snā class 4 verb]
    snā -> snāt (participle, neuter)
    [ablative single from √snā class 2 verb], [genitive single from √snā class 2 verb]
    snā (verb class 2)
    [present active third dual]
  • sarvatīrtheṣu -
  • sarvatīrtha (noun, neuter)
    [locative plural]
  • sarve -
  • sarva (noun, masculine)
    [nominative plural], [locative single]
    sarva (noun, neuter)
    [nominative dual], [vocative dual], [accusative dual], [locative single]
    sarvā (noun, feminine)
    [nominative dual], [vocative single], [vocative dual], [accusative dual]
  • yajñeṣu -
  • yajñeṣu (noun, masculine)
    [compound], [adverb]
    yajña (noun, masculine)
    [locative plural]
  • dīkṣitaḥ -
  • dīkṣitṛ (noun, masculine)
    [vocative single]
    dīkṣita (noun, masculine)
    [nominative single]
    dīkṣ -> dīkṣita (participle, masculine)
    [nominative single from √dīkṣ]
  • Line 2: “sarvayātrāsu dāneṣu puṇyabhāk tulasīśrayaḥ
  • sarvayā -
  • sarvā (noun, feminine)
    [instrumental single]
  • atrāsu -
  • atrā (noun, feminine)
    [locative plural]
  • dāneṣu -
  • dāna (noun, masculine)
    [locative plural]
    dāna (noun, neuter)
    [locative plural]
  • puṇyabhāk -
  • puṇyabhāj (noun, masculine)
    [compound], [adverb], [nominative single], [vocative single]
    puṇyabhāj (noun, neuter)
    [compound], [adverb], [nominative single], [vocative single], [accusative single]
  • tulasī -
  • tulasī (noun, feminine)
    [compound], [nominative single]
  • śrayaḥ -
  • śraya (noun, masculine)
    [nominative single]
Help me to continue this site

For over a decade I have been trying to fill this site with wisdom, truth and spirituality. What you see is only a tiny fraction of what can be. Now I humbly request you to help me make more time for providing more unbiased truth, wisdom and knowledge.

Let's make the world a better place together!

Like what you read? Consider supporting this website: