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Another common name, kala-azar (Hindustani: काला आज़ार کالا آزار kālā āzār), is derived from kala which means black in Sanskrit, as well as in the languages descended from it, including Assamese, [105] Hindi and Urdu; [106] the word azar is a Persian loanword in Hindustani that means "fever"; [105] [107] as such ...
Kala-azar (Hindustani: काला आज़ार کالا آزار kālā āzār), is derived from kala which means black in Sanskrit, as well as in the languages descended from it, including Hindi and Urdu; [5] the word azar is a Persian loanword in Hindustani that means "fever"; [6] [7] as such the disease is named for the darkening of the skin on the extremities and abdomen that occurs ...
Symptoms and laboratory findings suggestive of liver disease should prompt further tests and can thus help establish a diagnosis of hepatitis C infection early on. [ 16 ] Following the acute phase, the infection may resolve spontaneously in 10–50% of affected people; this occurs more frequently in young people and females.
Kala (Sanskrit: काल, romanized: Kālá/Kālam, [2] IPA:) is a Sanskrit term that means 'time' [3] or 'death'. [4] As time personified , destroying all things, Kala is a god of death , and often used as one of the epithets of Yama .
The Kela if has come from the word Kala (Means Black in Odia) may have some history back to the Irula tribe. The Kela are a hunting and gathering community found in the district of Midnapore . They were traditionally involved in the catching of snakes, toads and birds, a profession considered derogatory by neighbouring communities.
Kalā means 'performing art' in Sanskrit.In Hindu scriptures, Shiva is the master of Kalā. In the Lalita Sahasranama, the devi is invoked as an embodiment of the 64 fine arts. [1]
Kala (choreographer) (born 1971), Indian choreographer; KALA (FM), a radio station (88.5 FM) licensed to Davenport, Iowa, United States; Kala language, an Oceanic language of Papua New Guinea; Kālā, the spelling in modern orthography of the native name for the Hawaiian dollar; Kala, Hawaiian name for the bluespine unicornfish
Halāhala (Sanskrit हलाहल) or Kālakūṭa (Sanskrit कालकूट, lit. ' poison of death ') [1] [2] is the name of a poison in Hindu mythology.It was created from the Ocean of Milk when the devas and the asuras churned it (see Samudra Manthana) in order to obtain amrita, the nectar of immortality.