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Gita (given name)

Gita Geeta ( Devanagari: गीता ) is an Indian feminine given name.

Gita
  1. Redirect Bhagavad Gita
Gita (disambiguation)

Gita or Geeta (Sanskrit for "song"; Devanagari: गीता gītā) usually refers to the Sanskrit text Bhagavad Gita.

Gita or Geeta may also refer to:

Gita (elephant)

Gita was a 48-year-old Asian Elephant who died at the Los Angeles Zoo on 10 June 2006. Gita's death prompted dozens of animal rights activists, including In Defense of Animals, to accuse the zoo of neglecting and endangering its animals by placing them in unsatisfactory living conditions, and fueled a years-long debate in the city government over the ethics of keeping elephants in a zoo at all.

Gita (album)

Gita is the second solo studio album by Brazilian musician Raul Seixas. It was released in 1974, shortly after he returned to Brazil (he was exiled in the United States by orders of the military régime). Gita is one of Raul's more critically acclaimed albums, selling more than 600,000 copies and receiving a Gold Certification by ABPD.

The album shares its name with the religious Hindu epic poem Bhagavad Gita. The eponymous track also references the Bhagavad Gita heavily. It was voted by the Brazilian edition of Rolling Stone to be the 72nd greatest Brazilian song. Despite the lyric is original, the musical arrangements is a version of the music "No expectations" of Rolling Stones.

Usage examples of "gita".

MOODS AND POPPIES We took up the Bhagavad Gita -- our Little Group of Advanced Thinkers, you know -- in quite a thorough way the other evening.

The Bhagavad Gita, you know, is all about Reincarnation and Karma, and all those lovely old things.

The fourth, finally, and principal type of yoga expounded in the Bhagavad Gita is that known as the yoga of action, karma yoga.

The aim of the ascending serpent is to clarify and increase the light of consciousness within, and the first step to the gaining of this boon -- as told in the Bhagavad Gita, as in many another wisdom text -- is to abandon absolutely all concern for the fruits of action, whether in this world or in the next.

In the Hindu scriptures it is represented in the great conversation of the Bhagavad Gita between the Pandava prince Arjuna and his divine charioteer, the Lord Krishna.

He then wandered all over the ancient world, learning all sorts of secrets and leaving behind a priceless collection of mind-blowing legends—he's the Phoenix Madman mentioned in the Confucian scriptures, and he passed himself off as Krishna to recite that gorgeous Bible of revolutionary ethics, the Bhaga-vad Gita, to Arjuna in India, among other feats.

He then wandered all over the ancient world, learning all sorts of secrets and leaving behind a priceless collection of mind-blowing legends— he's the Phoenix Madman mentioned in the Confucian scriptures, and he passed himself off as Krishna to recite that gorgeous Bible of revolutionary ethics, the Bhaga-vad Gita, to Arjuna in India, among other feats.

Augustine and the Big Bang attest), the Bhagavad Gita has a point.

The Gita refers to this power: 'He who realizes the truth of my prolific manifestations and the (creative and dissolving) power of my divine Yoga is unshakeably united (to me).

The Upanishads and the Gita are loud with and full of the idea of going beyond morality.