मन्दुरा

Sanskrit

Etymology

Together with मन्दिर (mandira, temple), perhaps from Proto-Indo-European *mendreh₂ (enclosure, stall), itself a borrowing from an unidentified source that also gave Ancient Greek μάνδρα (mándra, enclosed space, stable).

Pronunciation

Noun

मन्दुरा • (mandurā) root form, f

  1. stable for horses
  2. bed

Declension

Feminine ā-stem declension of मन्दुरा (mandurā)
Singular Dual Plural
Nominative मन्दुरा
mandurā
मन्दुरे
mandure
मन्दुराः
mandurāḥ
Vocative मन्दुरे
mandure
मन्दुरे
mandure
मन्दुराः
mandurāḥ
Accusative मन्दुराम्
mandurām
मन्दुरे
mandure
मन्दुराः
mandurāḥ
Instrumental मन्दुरया / मन्दुरा¹
mandurayā / mandurā¹
मन्दुराभ्याम्
mandurābhyām
मन्दुराभिः
mandurābhiḥ
Dative मन्दुरायै
mandurāyai
मन्दुराभ्याम्
mandurābhyām
मन्दुराभ्यः
mandurābhyaḥ
Ablative मन्दुरायाः
mandurāyāḥ
मन्दुराभ्याम्
mandurābhyām
मन्दुराभ्यः
mandurābhyaḥ
Genitive मन्दुरायाः
mandurāyāḥ
मन्दुरयोः
mandurayoḥ
मन्दुराणाम्
mandurāṇām
Locative मन्दुरायाम्
mandurāyām
मन्दुरयोः
mandurayoḥ
मन्दुरासु
mandurāsu
Notes
  • ¹Vedic

Descendants

  • Tamil: மந்துரை (manturai)

References

  • Monier Williams (1899), मन्दुरा”, in A Sanskrit–English Dictionary, [], new edition, Oxford: At the Clarendon Press, →OCLC, page 788/3.
  • Mayrhofer, Manfred (2001) Etymologisches Wörterbuch des Altindoarischen [Etymological Dictionary of Old Indo-Aryan] (in German), volume 3, Heidelberg: Carl Winter Universitätsverlag, page 388
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