'Shashank' is itself a Sanskrit word, which means 'Chand, Chandra or Chandrama'.
The word for bicycle in Sanskrit is "वेगचक्रद्वन्द्व."
In Sanskrit, "Thalia" does not have a specific meaning as it is not a traditional Sanskrit word. It is likely a name or term from another language or culture.
The Moon. It is so because the Moon is "seen" to have the image of a rabbit(hare) on it. Take a look at the full moon on a clear moonlit night. Some read it as mR^igA~Nka- where the "image' is seen to be that of a deer.
"Kadlifalaani" is not a recognized Sanskrit word and does not have a standard meaning in the language. It is possible that it is a misspelling or a combination of words from different languages.
"shashnq kah" does not have a specific meaning in Sanskrit. It does not form a comprehensible phrase or word in the language.
meaning of shashank - In sanskrit it is another name of moon. or somebody says it is one of the name of Hindu lord shiva.
Shashank means Moon
The word for bicycle in Sanskrit is "वेगचक्रद्वन्द्व."
Sanskrit is a spiritual and scholarly language, and is the primary language of Hinduism. Most Sanskrit essays can be translated into Hindi.
Sanskrit language is also called by Brahmi or Devanagari!....Brahmi meaning originated by Brahma, which is the god that created this manifested universe according to Hinduism....Devanagari meaning language of gods!!
In Sanskrit, "Thalia" does not have a specific meaning as it is not a traditional Sanskrit word. It is likely a name or term from another language or culture.
The Moon. It is so because the Moon is "seen" to have the image of a rabbit(hare) on it. Take a look at the full moon on a clear moonlit night. Some read it as mR^igA~Nka- where the "image' is seen to be that of a deer.
Theres no exact word meaning for dia-betes in sanskrit.
"Kadlifalaani" is not a recognized Sanskrit word and does not have a standard meaning in the language. It is possible that it is a misspelling or a combination of words from different languages.
a knight or ksatria in Indonesian
"shashnq kah" does not have a specific meaning in Sanskrit. It does not form a comprehensible phrase or word in the language.
from the Sanskrit language meaning Venerable Island