Yes, "culture" and "sanskriti" both refer to the beliefs, customs, and practices of a particular group of people. "Sanskriti" is the Sanskrit term used in Indian languages to describe cultural heritage and identity.
Culture and sanskriti both refer to the beliefs, customs, and social behaviors of a group of people. Sanskriti is the Hindi term for culture, specifically in the context of Indian culture. They both encompass the shared values, traditions, and practices that shape a community's way of life.
In Malayalam, the Arabic name "Hina" is often transliterated as "Hindu," which is a term used to refer to someone who practices Hinduism. It does not carry the same meaning as the Arabic name.
A synonym of course. An antonym for a word that is defined for hvaing the opposite or nearly the opposite meaning.
== == Similar words are called "synonyms."Synonyms
It is a homophone with the words pear and pare -- they sound alike but are spelled differently.The term "homonym" is sometimes used to mean homophones, but it may also be applied specifically to words with the same sound and the same spelling, such as bear, meaning either to carry, to tolerate, or a large furry animal.
Culture and sanskriti both refer to the beliefs, customs, and social behaviors of a group of people. Sanskriti is the Hindi term for culture, specifically in the context of Indian culture. They both encompass the shared values, traditions, and practices that shape a community's way of life.
Yes, they can have the same meaning.
a large group sharing the same culture , language ,or history
bear, carry, brace, underpin, buttress, reinforce
The meaning associated with a particular color can vary greatly from culture to culture. For example, while white represents purity and weddings in Western cultures, it symbolizes death and mourning in many Asian cultures. It is important to consider the specific cultural context when interpreting the symbolic meaning of colors.
It means good health and protection.
That is true.
It is an instruction for you to carry out the arithmetic operation of subtraction on fractions whose denominators are not the same.
Yes, 'disobedient' and 'disobedience' carry the same meaning. But they do so in different forms and different ways. The word 'disobedient' is an adjective and therefore conveys a lack of obedience by modifying a noun. The word 'disobedience' is a noun, and therefore conveys the action of lacking in obedience.
The actual term is homoeopathy. But over the years both the terms are in use. And they are used alternatively. So you can say they carry the same meaning.
"although, however, nevertheless, on the otherhand, still, though, yet" Words that are "alternatives" are called "synonyms" meaning they carry the same meaning and can be interchanged in most cases.
The spelling is "bear" for the large furred mammal, and the verb meaning to carry, or tolerate. Sharing the same pronunciation is "bare," meaning uncovered, or to uncover.