Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This category contains articles with Telugu-language text. The primary purpose of these categories is to facilitate manual or automated checking of text in other languages. This category should only be added with the {} family of templates, never explicitly.
The following are the Telugu Pancha Kaavyas, the five great books of Telugu literature. Amuktamaalyada - Krishnadevaraya , 16th-century king-poet and patron of Telugu literature. Manu Charitra or Swaarochisha Manu Sambhavam - Allasani Peddana , a poet in the court of Krishnadevaraya .
A Dictionary of the Mixed Dialects and Foreign Words used in Telugu; with an Explanation of the Telugu Alphabet By C. P. Brown, Madras, 1854. The Telugu Reader, being a series of Letters, Private and on Business, Police and Revenue Matters, with an English Translation, Notes explaining the Grammar, and a little Lexicon. By Charles Philip Brown.
Telugu: sogasugā mṛdaṅga tāḷamu jata gūrci ninu sokka jēyu dhīruḍevvaḍō: śriranjani: Rūpaka: Telugu: śrī raghu kulamandu puṭṭi sītanu ceyi konina rāma candra: Hamsadhvani: Ādi: Telugu: śrī rāma pādamā nī kṛpa cālunē cittāniki rāvē: Amṛta vāhini: Ādi: Telugu: sudhā mādhurya bhāṣaṇa: sindhu rāma ...
Anubandha chatushtaya (Sanskrit: अनुबन्ध चतुष्टय) literally means four connections, and therefore, it is four-fold in nature and content viz, – a) adhikāri ('the qualified student') who has developed ekāgrata ('single pointed mind'), chitta shuddhi ('purity of the mind') and vikshepa ('freedom from restlessness and impurity') or adhikāra (aptitude); b) vishaya ...
Mahabhashyam Chittaranjan (25 August 1938 – 21 July 2023) was an Indian author, composer, teacher, and player of Telugu light music. He appeared in many programs on All India Radio over a 60-year period. == Childhood and family == Mahabhashyam Chittaranjan's father Sri. Rangachary was a retired chief engineer of All India Radio.
Pullela Sriramachandrudu studies Panchakavyas, Sriharsha's Naishadam, Murari Anargharaghavam and Siddhantakaumudi under his father. He later joined the Sanskrit college at Narendrapuram and studied the classics like Kirataarjuneeyam and other grammatical works under the tutelage of Sri.
Citta (Pali and Sanskrit: 𑀘𑀺𑀢𑁆𑀢, pronounced chitta) is one of three overlapping terms used in the Nikaya to refer to the mind, the others being manas and viññāṇa. Each is sometimes used in the generic and non-technical sense of "mind" in general, and the three are sometimes used in sequence to refer to one's mental processes ...