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अधिषवण (adhiSavaNa)

 
Capeller Eng
English
अधिष॑वण
a.
fit for pressing (the Soma)
n.
the
Soma-press.
Spoken Sanskrit
English
अधिषवण adhiSavaNa
adj.
used for extracting and straining the soma juice
अधिषवण adhiSavaNa
n.
hand-press for extracting and straining the soma juice
अधिषवण adhiSavaNa
n.
hand-press for extracting and straining the soma juice
अधिषवण्य adhiSavaNya
m.
two parts of the hand-press for extracting and straining the soma juice
पाणिपीडन pANipIDana
n.
pressing the hand
तल tala
m.
pressing the strings of a lute with the left hand
Apte
English
अधिषवणम् [adhiṣavaṇam], [अधिषूयते सोमो$त्र
अधिसु-आधारे ल्युट्]
A contrivance (like a hand-press) of leather
&c.
to extract and strain the Soma juice, or (a. ) used for the act of straining
&c.
[भावे-ल्युट्] Straining Soma juice.
Apte 1890
English
अधिषवणं [अधिषूयते सोमोऽत्र
अधिसु-आधारे ल्युट्] 1 A contrivance (like a hand-press) of leather &c. to extract and strain the Soma juice, or (a.) used for the act of straining &c.
2 [भावे ल्युट्] Straining Soma juice.
Monier Williams Cologne
English
अधि-ष॑वण
n.
(generally used in the dual), hand-press for extracting and straining the Soma juice
अधि-ष॑वण
mfn.
used for extracting and straining the Soma juice.
Monier Williams 1872
English
अधिषवण अधि-षवण, अम्, n. (fr. rt. सु
with अधि), Ved. hand-press for extracting and strain-
ing the Soma juice
(अस्, आ, अम्), used for extracting
and straining the Soma juice.
Macdonell
English
अधिषवण adhi-ṣávaṇa,
a.
suitable for 🞄pressing
n.
Soma-press.
Goldstucker
English
अधिषवण Tatpur. n. (-णम्) (ved.) The name of two wooden
boards, on which the juice of the Soma plant was expressed
and where the Somābhiṣava (q. v.) was placed, in sacrifices
as the Jyotiṣṭoma or those sharing in the principal rites
of it. E. सू with अधि, kṛt aff. ल्युट्.
Vedic Reference
English
Adhi-ṣavaṇa. The two Adhiṣavaṇas^1 are usually understood,
as by Roth^2 and Zimmer, ^3 to designate the two boards between
which the Soma was pressed. Hillebrandt, ^4 however, shows
from the ritual that the boards were not placed one over the
other, but were placed one behind the other, the two serving
as a foundation upon which the Soma was pressed by a stone.
This theory seems to account best for the etymological sense
of the name ‘over-press, as well as for the use of the word as
an adjective (‘used for pressing upon’). But according to the
procedure as witnessed by Haug^5 in the Deccan, the shoots of
the plant are first placed on the skin, one of the boards being
then laid over them and pounded with a stone. The shoots
are then taken out and placed upon the board, the second
board being then laid over them.
1) Vājasaneyi Saṃhitā, xviii. 21
Av. v. 20, 10
Śatapatha Brāhmaṇa,
iii. 9, 4, 1
5, 3, 22 (adhiṣavaṇe
phalake)
Aitareya Brāhmaṇa, vii. 32
(adhiṣavaṇaṃ carma, ‘the skin upon
which the pressing takes place’
adhiṣavaṇe phalake, ‘the boards on
which the pressing takes place,
etc.).
2) St. Petersburg Dictionary, s.v.
3) Altindisches Leben, 277.
4) Vedische Mythologie, 1, 148 et seq.
5) See Haug, Aitareya Brāhmaṇa, 2,
p. 488, n. 10.
वाचस्पत्यम्
Sanskrit
अधिषवण
न०
अधिषूयते सोमः यत्र अधि + षू अभिषवेआधारे ल्युट् सोमाभिषवसाधनचर्म्मादिपात्रे “अंशू-निव ग्रावाभिषवणे” इति वेदः भावे ल्युट् अभिषवे
Capeller
German
अधिष॑वण zum Pressen das Soma dienlich
n.
Somapresse.
Grassman
German
(adhi-ṣávaṇa), n., die Presse
AV. u. s. w., davon %%(adhiṣavaṇyà), adhiṣavaṇía%%.