Search for crossword answers and clues
Sanskrit for "master"
Answer for the clue "Sanskrit for "master" ", 5 letters:
swami
Alternative clues for the word swami
Word definitions for swami in dictionaries
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Swami is a Hindu honorific title. Swami may also refer to: Swami Records , a record label Swami (band) , a United Kingdom band Swami, a software used for editing SoundFont files
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. A Hindu religious teacher.
Usage examples of swami.
A writer in some strange way knows his own future - his end is in his beginning, as it is in the pages of a horoscope, and the schoolboy Swami, watching the friend with whom he had needlessly quarrelled, vanish into the vast unknown spaces of India, had already experienced a little of what Krishna came to feel as he watched his beloved wife die of typhoid.
Charlotte was the fact that sannyasin Swami Prem Prasad was with Hanya at the airport.
Quickie was bringing someone to see Sheff Hassell, probably Swami Benares!
As for Caglio, you probably picked him as Sheff Hassell chose Swami Benares - because you had looked into his record.
On 9 January 1983, she divorced him in Portland, Oregon, and a week later married an American sannyasin, Swami Prartha Subhan.
Our Hermy attended as Psyche -- She siked and she got it across And Fothergil Finch, rather gaumy With Cosmic cosmetics, was there, But the Swami went just as the Swami, After oiling the kinks in his hair.
Brainstorm Slum Fake, Nut and Freak Psychologist Eternally shall buzz and hum, And Spook and Swami keep their tryst with Thinkers in a Mental Mist.
It is stated that his patriotism got the religious colour by his contact with one Swami Hamsa.
Gurus, swamis, psychics, Tarot-card readers, acupuncturists, herbalists to movie stars, channelers, aura interpreters, palm readers, chaos-theory dice counselors, past-life guides, high-colonic therapists, and other specialists offered their services in heartening numbers.
Besides the Gilberts were Dudley Lawton and his father, Hata, the Pandit, the Swami, and the Guru - the latter four persons in high dudgeon at being deprived of the lucrative profits of a Sunday night.
At last, continued the Swami, the swaying and the suggestion of chanting ceased, the lambent nimbuses around the now drooping and motionless heads faded, while the cloaked shapes slumped curiously on their pedestals.