yatra
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
Noun
yatra (plural yatras)
- A Hindu pilgrimage.
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- Thousands of activists and vehicles therefore diffused quietly out of Delhi in the following days to reassemble in a yatra that now swelled to 40–50,000 people.
- 2002, John Ittner, Lighting the Lamp of Wisdom: a Week Inside a Yoga Ashram[1], SkyLight Paths Publishing, →ISBN, page 80:
- By calling this little stroll a yatra I am making a mild joke to myself, because in India a yatra can be a grueling expedition such as a hike to the top of Mount Kailas in the Himalayas.
- 2005, Christian Strümpell, “Forts and Camps in Tribal Orissa: Kshatriyaization and Industrialization Compared”, in Georg Pfeffer, editor, Contemporary Society: Identity, Intervention and Ideology in Tribal India and Beyond[2], volume 7, Concept Publishing Company, →ISBN, page 71:
- At the inauguration of this temple a yatra for her was performed attracting again a big part of Chatamput's mostly female inhabitants, who all claimed that Kondamakalamma now is the "real" goddess of the village.
- 2006, Ritual and Identity: Performative Practices as Effective Transformations of Social Reality[3], volume 8, LIT Verlag Berlin-Hamburg-Münster, →ISBN, page 287:
- I thus wonder whether the yatra was not primarily "efficient" for the upper middle classes who - physically removed from direct participation - enjoyed the BJP going on a yatra, presenting them with ready-made edutainment about nationality, easy to digest, without much physical and mental effort.
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Anagrams
Javanese
Alternative forms
Etymology
Perhaps ultimately from Sanskrit अर्थ (artha). Compare Balinese ᬅᬃᬣ (arta).
Noun
yatra (ngoko dhuwit, krama yatra)
References
- The Linguistic Center of Yogyakarta (2015) “yatra”, in Kamus Basa Jawa (Bausastra Jawa) [Javanese Language Dictionary (Javanese Dictionary)] (in Javanese), Yogyakarta: Kanisius, →ISBN