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Select your preferred input and type any Sanskrit or English word. Enclose the word in “” for an EXACT match e.g. “yoga”.
Grammar Search
"pippala" has 1 results
pippala: masculine vocative singular stem: pippala
Amarakosha Search
1 result
WordReferenceGenderNumberSynonymsDefinition
bodhidrumaḥ2.4.20MasculineSingularcaladalaḥ, pippala, kuñjarāśanaḥ, aśvatthaḥ
Monier-Williams Search
11 results for pippala"
Devanagari
BrahmiEXPERIMENTAL
pippalam. the sacred fig-tree, Ficus Religiosa (commonly called Peepal) etc. (see ) View this entry on the original dictionary page scan.
pippalam. a kind of bird View this entry on the original dictionary page scan.
pippalam. a nipple View this entry on the original dictionary page scan.
pippalam. equals niraṃśuka-, or śula- View this entry on the original dictionary page scan.
pippalam. the sleeve of a jacket or coat View this entry on the original dictionary page scan.
pippalam. Name of a son of mitra- and revati- View this entry on the original dictionary page scan.
pippalam. plural Name of a school of (prob. for pippalāda-) View this entry on the original dictionary page scan.
pippalan. a berry (especially of the Peepal tree) etc. View this entry on the original dictionary page scan.
pippalan. sensual enjoyment View this entry on the original dictionary page scan.
pippalan. water View this entry on the original dictionary page scan.
pippalan. the sleeve of a coat View this entry on the original dictionary page scan.
Macdonell Search
1 result
pippala m. sacred fig-tree, Peepal (Ficus religiosa); â, f. N. of a river; n. (píp-), berry, sp. the fruit of the sacred fig-tree; sensual enjoyment: -½ada, a. eating the fruit of the Peepal tree; m. pl. a school of the AV.; &isharp;, f. berry; long pepper.
Vedic Index of
Names and Subjects
1 result1 result
pippala Is found in two passages of the Rigveda meaning ‘ berry,’ used with a mystic signification, and in neither case with any certain reference to the berry of the fig-tree. In the Brhadāranyaka Upanisad the general sense of ‘berry’ is not necessary, and the special sense of ‘berry’ of the Peepal is quite possible: the latter meaning is perhaps intended in the śatapatha Brāhmana. In the Atharvaveda the feminine form of the word, Pippalī, appears denoting berries used as a remedy for wounds, like Arundhatī.
Vedabase Search
2 results
pippala banyan treeSB 1.6.15
pippala of the treeSB 11.11.6
2 results
pippala noun (masculine) niraṃśuka (Monier-Williams, Sir M. (1988))
a kind of bird (Monier-Williams, Sir M. (1988))
a nipple (Monier-Williams, Sir M. (1988))
Ficus Religiosa (commonly called Peepal) (Monier-Williams, Sir M. (1988))
name of a school of AV (Monier-Williams, Sir M. (1988))
name of a son of Mitra and Revati (Monier-Williams, Sir M. (1988))
the sacred fig-tree (Monier-Williams, Sir M. (1988))
the sleeve of a jacket or coat (Monier-Williams, Sir M. (1988))

Frequency rank 6618/72933
pippala noun (neuter) a berry (esp. of the Peepal tree) (Monier-Williams, Sir M. (1988))
sensual enjoyment (Monier-Williams, Sir M. (1988))
the sleeve of a coat (Monier-Williams, Sir M. (1988))
water (Monier-Williams, Sir M. (1988))

Frequency rank 36916/72933
 

pippala

Plant sacred fig, Ficus religiosa

Parse Time: 1.126s Search Word: pippala" Input Encoding: IAST IAST: pippala