The term "viviśuste" in Sanskrit is a perfect tense
form derived from the root "viś," meaning "he/she/it
entered," "penetrated," or "went inside."
Grammatical Analysis
- Form: viviśuste (विविशुस्ते)
- This is perfect tense (also called laṭ-lṛt), third person singular.
- It conveys the action has entered or entered already.
Usage example:
In classical texts, similar forms might describe a person, animal,
or object entering a location, space, or state of being. For instance:
saḥ gṛhe viviśuste – "He has entered the house."
gajaḥ vanaṁ viviśuste – "The elephant entered the forest."
- 1 Source
Semantic Notes
- The perfect tense in Sanskrit often implies completed
- action in the past.
- "viviśuste" is specifically tied to the context of physical or
- metaphorical entering rather than abstract penetration in
- philosophical texts.
- 1 Source
Devanāgarī Representation
- Standard Sanskrit script: विविशुस्ते
- Transliteration: viviśuste (IAST)
References for Further Study
- 4 Sources
In summary, "viviśuste" = "he/she/it has entered" in classical Sanskrit,
derived from the verbal root viś, and is used for completed
actions indicating entry or penetration.
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