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इळा (iLA)

 
Capeller Eng
English
इ॑ळा
f.
= इड् + speech, earth, cow
N.
of a goddess
(personif. of worship and sacrifice), a daughter of Manu or Dakṣa,
E.
of Durgā.
Monier Williams Cologne
English
इ॑डा,
f.
or (in Ṛg-veda) इ॑ळा, (not to be confounded with the
inst.
case of इड् above), refreshing draught, refreshment, animation, recreation, comfort, vital spirit,
RV.
AV.
AitBr.
offering, libation (especially a holy libation, offered between the Pra-yāga and Anu-yāga, and consisting of four preparations of milk, poured into a vessel containing water, and then partially drunk by the priest and sacrificers
personified in the cow, the symbol of feeding, and nourishment),
ŚBr.
i, 8, 1, 1,
&c.
AitBr.
KātyŚr.
Kauś.
(metaphorically
cf.
इद्), stream or flow of praise and worship (personified as the goddess of sacred speech and action, invoked together with Aditi and other deities, but especially in the Āprī hymns together with Sarasvatī and Mahī or Bhāratī),
RV.
AV.
VS.
&c.
the earth, food,
Sāy.
a cow
the goddess इडा or इळा (daughter of Manu or of man thinking on and worshipping the gods
she is the wife of Budha and mother of Purū-ravas
in another aspect she is called Maitrāvaruṇi as daughter of Mitra-Varuṇa, two gods who were objects of the highest and most spiritual devotion)
N.
of Durgā
of a daughter of Dakṣa and wife of Kaśyapa
of a wife of Vasudeva and of the Rudra Ṛta-dhvaja
speech,
BhP.
heaven,
L.
earth,
MBh.
a particular artery on the left side of the body
a tubular vessel (one of the principal channels of the vital spirit, that which is on the right side of the body),
L.
Benfey
English
इळा इऌआ, see इदा।
Burnouf
French
इळा इऌआ
f.
Vd. la même que इला et इडा।