Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] date 8 dates 1 daughter 9 dawn 23 dawns 6 day 9 days 4 | Frequency [« »] 24 rigveda 24 said 24 while 23 dawn 23 some 22 book 22 books | Vedic Reader (excerpts) IntraText - Concordances dawn |
Chapter, Paragraph
1 Intro, 7| and the goddesses Usas, Dawn, and Ratri, Night. The atmospheric 2 Intro, 9| hymns are those addressed to Dawn, equal if not superior in 3 1 | is like the rays of the dawn and the sun, and like the 4 6 | winning of light, sun, and dawn. Thus Indra is invoked to 5 6 | for it. He produces the dawn as well as the sun; he opens 6 6 | opens the darkness with the dawn and the sun. The cows. mentioned 7 6 | mentioned along with the sun and dawn, or with the sun alone, 8 6 | the darkness of night at dawn. The latter feature is probably 9 6 | car of Usas, goddess of Dawn (iv. 51); this trait is 10 6 | kept back by the delaying dawn. He is also said to have 11 9 | to say, is kindled before dawn), produces Mitra, and when 12 11 | USÁS~The goddess of Dawn is addressed in about twenty 13 11 | sacrificial fire is kindled at dawn, Usas is often associated 14 11 | goes to meet the shining Dawn as she approaches. She is 15 13 | the lover of his sister (Dawn), and was given by the gods 16 16 | mares called hárit bays.~The Dawn or Dawns reveal or produce 17 16 | the lap of the Dawns; but Dawn is also sometimes Surya' 18 16 | brilliant steed brought by Dawn. Occasionally he is, described 19 17 | their appearance is between dawn and sunrise: when darkness 20 17 | probably the rising Sun and Dawn). Pusan is once said to 21 17 | said to be their son; and Dawn seems to be meant by their 22 23 | light and generated the dawn. The path trodden by the 23 26 | as a dual divinity with Dawn in the form of Usása-nákta