Search results for "Vedic"

showing 10 items of 34 documents

Root lexical features and inflectional marking of tense in Proto-Indo-European

2009

This paper examines early inflectional morphology related to the tense-aspect system of Proto-Indo-European. It will be argued that historical linguistics can shed light on the long-standing debate over the emergence of tense-aspect morphology in language acquisition. The dispute over this issue is well-known; it has been pursued mostly by scholars following various general linguistic approaches, from typology to acquisition, but also by historical linguists and Indo-Europeanists, who have long debated about the precedence of aspect or tense from both a synchronic and a diachronic perspective. However, so far Indo-Europeanists have rarely confronted their results in a successful way with re…

Linguistics and LanguageRoot (linguistics)HistoryinjunctiveLexical aspectVedic SanskritOld GreekGrammatical categoryLanguage acquisitionGrammatical aspectlexical aspectLanguage and LinguisticsPast tenseLinguisticslanguage.human_languageSettore L-LIN/01 - Glottologia E LinguisticaPhilosophyIndo-European.inflectional tenselanguageHistorical linguisticsroot telic featureVedic Sanskrit
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The Homeric compound Ὑπερίων and the sun in the Indo-European culture

2017

This paper aims at reconstructing the semantic meaning of Homeric Ὑπερίων, the epithet of the sun, whose etymology is still not clear. After presenting the modern interpretations, which describe it as an adjective in the comparative form derived from the adverbial particle ὑπέρ ‘up, above’, the ancient grammarians’ hypothesis on Ὑπερίων as a compound is tested, taking into consideration the textual analysis of those discourse contexts in which the terms for sun are used in archaic Greek and Vedic Sanskrit in comparative perspective. In particular, the co-occurrence with the motion verb go, i.e. εἶμι and i from the same IE root *h1ey-, in the Homeric poems and in the Rigveda respectively, mi…

Morphological compounds Indo-European etymology historical-comparative analysis Homeric Greek Vedic SanskritSettore L-LIN/01 - Glottologia E Linguistica
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Areca nut and its role in oral submucous fibrosis

2014

Areca nut, commonly called as betel nut or supari, is a fruit of areca catechu palm tree, which is native of South Asia and Pacific Islands. The seed or endosperm is consumed fresh, boiled or after sun drying or curing. Chewing areca nut is thought to have central nervous system stimulating effect and along with this it is known to have salivary stimulating and digestive properties. According to the traditional Ayurvedic medicine, chewing areca nut and betel leaf is a good remedy against halitosis. It is also used for its deworming property. Along with these beneficial effects of areca nut one of its most harmful effects on the human body in general and oral cavity in particular is the deve…

NutAyurvedic medicineOdontologíaReviewCatechuOral cavitymedicineGeneral DentistryArecaOral Medicine and PathologyTraditional medicinebiologybusiness.industrydigestive oral and skin physiologyBetel leaffood and beverages:CIENCIAS MÉDICAS [UNESCO]Betelbiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseCiencias de la saludstomatognathic diseasesOral submucous fibrosisUNESCO::CIENCIAS MÉDICASbusinessJournal of Clinical and Experimental Dentistry
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Occurrence of resveratrol and pterostilbene in age-old darakchasava, an ayurvedic medicine from India

2000

'Darakchasava' is a well known Indian herbal preparation of which the main ingredient is Vitis vinifera L. This 'ayurvedic' medicine is prescribed as a cardiotonic and also given for other disorders. HPLC analysis of this age old formulation revealed the presence of polyphenols like resveratrol and pterostilbene. These phenolic compounds are now known as antioxidants, cancer chemopreventive agents, and also known to reduce mortality from coronary heart disease by increasing high density lipoproteins like cholesterol and inhibiting platelet aggregation (Soleas, J.S., Diamandis, E.P., Goldberg, D.M., 1997. Resveratrol: a molecule whose time has come? and gone? Clin. Biochem. 30 (2), 91-113). …

PharmacologyPterostilbeneTraditional medicinePlant ExtractsCholesterolIndiafood and beveragesPharmacognosyResveratrolAntineoplastic Agents PhytogenicAntioxidantsMedicine Ayurvedicchemistry.chemical_compoundIngredientPhenolschemistryResveratrolPolyphenolStilbenesDrug DiscoveryHypoglycemic AgentsPlatelet aggregation inhibitorVitis viniferaChromatography High Pressure LiquidPlatelet Aggregation InhibitorsJournal of Ethnopharmacology
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Towards a reconstruction of Indo-European culture: semantic functions of IE *men-

2002

Indo-European language reconstruction has allowed us to advance some hypotheses with regard to possible reconstructing cultural contents of what has been defined “Indo-European ideology” (Campanile 1992). The method of textual comparison, which compares no longer and not merely single lexical items or single syntactic constructions, but the whole literary systems too, is able to bring out linguistic and extra-linguistic reference contexts. The interest in reconstructing the Indo-European “basic lexicon” is renewed in the light of recent typological criteria of root classification (according to their active or stative meaning): the focus today is on drawing up the so-called “global etymologi…

Proto-Indo-Europeanpolysemyverbal root.semanticVedic SanskritHomeric GreekSettore L-LIN/01 - Glottologia E Linguistica
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Alle origini della deissi indoeuropea. Un approccio linguistico cognitivo

Gli studi di indoeuropeistica non sempre dialogano con le teorie linguistiche contemporanee e, in particolare, con le scienze cognitive (cfr. Melchert 2016). Tuttavia, il contributo che le seconde possono dare alla ricostruzione di fenomeni linguistici e culturali indoeuropei non è trascurabile. Non è d’altra parte meno rilevante l’apporto che la prospettiva storica può dare allo studio dei processi cognitivi umani, dall’acquisizione del linguaggio da parte dei bambini fino all’individuazione degli universali linguistici. Scopo di questo studio è discutere i risultati di una recentissima ricerca (Bartolotta 2018), che mostra il ruolo dell’indoeuropeo nella spiegazione degli universali lingu…

Sequenza temporaleIncorporazionegreco omericoDeissisanscrito vedicoSettore L-LIN/01 - Glottologia E Linguistica
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Uomini e alberi. Tre indagini storico-religiose. Nota introduttiva

2021

In this introductory note I present three essays on the relationship between trees and rituals in ancient Mediterranean civilisations and in Vedic India.

Settore L-ANT/02 - Storia Grecaancient Mediterranean Vedic India trees ritualsSettore M-STO/06 - Storia Delle Religioni
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Vr̥kṣa vivāha. Dendrogamie in India fra tradizioni antiche e pratiche devozionali contemporanee

2021

An inextricable tangle of branches and roots arises in many Indian villages in the place where two trees united in marriage (vr̥kṣa vivāha), grow intertwining with each other in an everlasting 'embrace'. This interweaving describes well the complex network of symbols and textual references that are revealed in the relationships that Indian culture has built around a pair of trees: the aśvattha and the śamī. In this paper, I will try to highlight some mythological and ritual aspects related to this pair. The two trees, in fact, although in today's context separately, are the object of rituals that turn out to be true tree marriages. In particular, concerning aśvattha, what is striking is tha…

Settore L-OR/17 - Filosofie Religioni E Storia Dell'India E Dell'Asia CentraleHinduism Vedic Ritual History of Religion Neoanimism Dendrolatry
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Il culto dei gatti in India. Continuità ed evoluzione di credenze e pratiche religiose dall’India vedica all’India contemporanea

2019

Cat as an animal is a sporadic presence in Vedic mythology and Brahmanic works on rituals, while it appears in a few cult practices of contemporary popular religiosity in India. This article holds that in Indian devotional practices, the cat is conceived as an animal with an ambiguous nature. It also suggests that the cat cult is linked with the need to tame chaos, violence, and con$ict, and to place them in a controlled, orderly, and pacified cosmos. To understand these phenomena, this article studies, from a multidisciplinary perspective, contemporary religious practices in the light of the Indian tradition, and suggests that the cat cult was subject to substantial Brahmanization.

Settore L-OR/17 - Filosofie Religioni E Storia Dell'India E Dell'Asia CentraleSettore M-STO/06 - Storia Delle ReligioniSettore L-OR/18 - Indologia E Tibetologiacat Vedic popular cults and rites cat goddess Sanskrit Hindu myths History of Religion Anthropology
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Una forma leggiadra. Simboli sessuali dell'altalena in India nel rito del mahavrata e in alcune pratiche contemporanee

2022

In the grammar of rituals described in Vedic texts, the swing was an object whose meanings referred to the propitiation of fertility and solar symbolism. Although its use remains in various contemporary festive contexts, its meaning has been differently defined. By analyzing the passages from works belonging to the ancient religious literature, this article examines the description of the swing’s construction and the rite performed on it by the officiant named hotr. Such an approach allows us to focus on the symbolic elements related to the swing in one of the focal points of the sequence of the mahavrata ceremony. Through a diachronic investigation and considering the data from the compara…

Settore L-OR/17 - Filosofie Religioni E Storia Dell'India E Dell'Asia CentraleSettore M-STO/06 - Storia Delle ReligioniSwinging Festival Vedic Ritual Hindu Ritual History of Religion Vedic StudiesSettore L-OR/18 - Indologia E Tibetologia
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