The meaning of HARE is any of various swift, gnawing, herbivorous, usually shy lagomorph mammals (family Leporidae and especially genus Lepus) that have long ears, short tails, and powerful long hind legs, are usually solitary or sometimes live in pairs,
(compare Old English hasu, Middle High German heswe ("pale, dull")), from Proto-Indo-European *kas- (cf. Welsh cannu ("to whiten"), ceinach ("hare"), Latin cānus ("white"), cascus ("old"), Old Prussian sasins ("hare"), Pashto (soe, "hare"), Sanskrit शश (śaśa...
Middle English, from Old Englishhara; akin to Old High Germanhasohare, Sanskritśaśa, Old Englishhasugray Verb derivative ofhareentry1 First Known Use Noun before the 12th century, in the meaning definedabove Verb circa 1893, in the meaning definedabove ...
Perhaps cognate with Sanskrit sasah, Afghan soe, Welsh ceinach "hare." Rabbits burrow in the ground; hares do not. þou hast a crokyd tunge heldyng wyth hownd and wyth hare. ["Jacob's Well," c. 1440] hare (v.) "to harry, harass," 1520s; meaning "to frighten" is 1650s; ...
of uncertain origin; possibly the original sense was "gray" (compare Old Englishhasu, Old High Germanhasan"gray"), from PIE*khas-"gray" (source also of Latincanus"white, gray, gray-haired"). Perhaps cognate with Sanskritsasah, Afghansoe, Welshceinach"hare." Rabbits burrow in the ground;...
of uncertain origin; possibly the original sense was "gray" (compare Old Englishhasu, Old High Germanhasan"gray"), from PIE*kas-"gray" (cognates: Latincanus"white, gray, gray-haired"). Perhaps cognate with Sanskritsasah, Afghansoe, Welshceinach"hare." Rabbits burrow in the ground; hares...
"to harry, harass," 1520s; meaning "to frighten" is 1650s; of uncertain origin; connections have been suggested to harry (v.) and to hare (n.). Related:Hared;haring. 双语例句 1. Monks shave their heads, as do devotees of theHareKrishna movement. ...
"In the Amarakosa Sanskrit dictionary the word murti carries import in twofold meanings, namely, form and difficulty. Therefore amurtikam is explained by Acarya Sri Visvanatha Cakravarti Thakura as meaning "without difficulty." The transcendental form of eternal bliss and knowledge can be experience...
The meaning of the gayatri-mantra has been clearly revealed by Srila Vyasadeva in the first verse of Srimad-Bhagavatam. Had he not come to this world, ‘everything would have been nothing.’ He revealed this gayatri-mantra, as well as the catur-sloki of Srimad-Bhagavatam and its explanatio...
At Kosenji Temple in Kusatsu Onsen town (Gunma Prefecture), there is mysteriously placed among the other bodhisattva steles, dosojin statues, etc. a very small statue that is almost identical to the dol hareubang or stone grandfather guardians of Cheju I