enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Om - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Om

    Ṛc (ऋच्) is speech, states the text, and sāman (सामन्) is breath; they are pairs, and because they have love for each other, speech and breath find themselves together and mate to produce a song. [57] [58] The highest song is Om, asserts section 1.1 of Chandogya Upanishad.

  3. Prana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prana

    As the embryo of the waters (fire), thee, O Prâna, do bind to me, that I may live.' (11.4) [citation needed] The Upanishads, particularly the Yoga Upanishads, discuss various breaths with specific names and functions. Prana is consistently regarded as the primary breath, akin to breath in English, while apana is associated with carrying off ...

  4. Hindu cosmology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hindu_cosmology

    He then formed the Purusha from the water. He also created the speech, the fire, the prana (breath of life), the air and the various senses, the directions, the trees, the mind, the moon and other things. [66] The Brihadaranyaka Upanishad (1.4) mentions that in the beginning, only the Atman existed as the Purusha. Feeling lonely, the Purusha ...

  5. Gogola (film) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gogola_(film)

    Gogola is a 1966 Indian-Hindi language Indian giant monster film directed by Balwant B Dave and produced by Indra Dhanush Films. It is perhaps the first and only Hindi film whose titular character is a giant monster. Gogola is a bipedal aquatic reptile who can breathe fire. It is now regarded as a lost film. [1]

  6. Jiva - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jiva

    Jiva (Sanskrit: जीव, IAST: jīva), also referred as Jivātman, is a living being or any entity imbued with a life force in Hinduism and Jainism. [1] The word itself originates from the Sanskrit verb-root jīv, which translates as 'to breathe' or 'to live'.

  7. Kapalabhati - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kapalabhati

    Vatakrama, a practice similar to the pranayama technique of Bhastrika or "Breath of Fire", except that exhalation is active while inhalation is passive, the opposite of normal breathing. Vyutkrama, a practice similar to Jala neti, it involves sniffing water through the nostrils and letting it flow down into the mouth, and then spitting it out.

  8. Fire breathing (circus act) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fire_breathing_(circus_act)

    Fire breathing is the act of making a plume or stream of fire by creating a precise mist of fuel from the mouth over an open flame. Regardless of the precautions taken, it is always a dangerous activity, but the proper technique and the correct fuel reduces the risk of injury or death.

  9. Fire breathing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fire_breathing

    Fire breathing, fire-breathing, firebreathing, fire breather, or firebreather may refer to: Fire-breathing monster, a mythological or fantastical monster able to breathe fire; Fire breathing (circus act), the act of making a plume of fire by creating a precise mist of fuel from the mouth; Firebreather, a comic series about a teenage half-dragon