A branch of the Indo-Iranian family of languages.
A language family originating from India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, Sri Lanka and the Maldives.
Sinònims
Examples for "Indo-Aryan"
Examples for "Indo-Aryan"
1The Upanishads represent the loftiest heights of ancient Indo-Aryan thought and culture.
2Examples of this class of myth in Indo-Aryan literature are not hard to find.
3There are two elements in Mexican, as in Quiche, and Indo-Aryan, and Maori, and even Andaman cosmogonic myth.
4These will be chiefly exposed in the chapter on "Indo-Aryan Myths of the Beginnings of Things," which follows.
5The first and oldest source of our knowledge of Indo-Aryan myths is the Rig-Veda, whose nature and character have been described.
1He studied Persian and Arabic literature at Patna, the centre of Indic Mohammedan learning.
2When Alexander entered India there were still two bodies of Indic people west of the Indus.
3For in truth the Buddhism of China and Tibet has no place in the history of Indic religions.
4What is common and world-wide in the forms of Indic faith we have shown in a previous chapter.
5For the historian of Indic religions this fact is of great significance, since such practice is the entering wedge which was to split the castes.
6The innocent plunges his hand into boiling water and fetches out a stone (Anglo-Saxon law) or a coin (Indic law) without injury to his hand.
7This thing says, Three-rd pers period sing periodic indic period of Be,' the last in heavy bold type.