-
Pishachas (Sanskrit: पिशाच,
piśāca) are flesh-eating
demons in
Indian religions,
appearing in
Hindu and
Buddhist mythologies. A
pishacha is a malevolent...
- The
Nuristani languages are one of the
three groups within the Indo-Iranian
language family,
alongside the Indo-Aryan and
Iranian languages. They have...
- death,
become forces of Mara.
These forces consist of Asuras, Rakshasa,
Pisacas,
Aratis and animals. His name is
first mentioned in the
Atharva Veda (1200...
- The
Dardic languages (also
Dardu or
Pisaca), or Hindu-Kush Indo-Aryan languages, are a
group of
several Indo-Aryan
languages spoken in
northern ****stan...
- Madrid: Sequitur. 2008
Pervertitov vodič kroz film, Zagreb:
Hrvatsko društvo
pisaca &
Izdanja Antibarbarus (Biblioteka Tvrđa),
edited by Srećko Horvat. ("The...
-
considers them
equally impotent in
search for liberation.
Demons (bhūta, preta,
piśāca) may thus be
understood as
personifications of
correlative mental states...
-
follows Masica (1991), and
Kausen (2006). The
Dardic languages (also
Dardu or
Pisaca) are a
group of Indo-Aryan
languages largely spoken in the northwestern...
- of King Vikramāditya and his
nightly quests to
capture an
elusive one.
Piśāca, the
returned spirits of evil-doers or
those who died insane, also bear...
- ideas,
words which can most
readily be
connected with the north-western and
Pisaca groups.[citation needed] The
Himalayas run
along Nepal,
India and ****stan...
- to the north-western
group of languages,
instead of as
belonging to the
Piśāca family as its
origin demands. It
cannot be said that
either classification...