Sloka 466

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Sloka 466

Sloka (श्लोक)

प्रत्यगेकरसं पूर्णमनन्तं सर्वतोमुखम् ।
एकमेवाद्वयं ब्रह्म नेह नानास्ति किंचन ॥ ४६६ ॥

पदच्छेद / Padaccheda

प्रत्यक्-एक-रसम्
पूर्णम्
अनन्तम्
सर्वतः-मुखम्
एकम्-एव
अद्वयम्
ब्रह्म

इह
नानास्ति
किञ्चन

Transliteration (लिप्यांतरण)

pratyag-eka-rasam pūrṇam anantam sarvato-mukham |
ekam-eva-advayam brahma neha nānāsti kiñcana || 466 ||

Translation (अनुवाद)

Brahman is the one, non-dual essence, perfect, infinite, and all-pervading; in it, there is no multiplicity whatsoever.

Word-by-Word Meaning (अन्वय के साथ शब्दार्थ)

Sanskrit (संस्कृत) English Meaning (अर्थ) Hindi Meaning (हिंदी अर्थ)
प्रत्यक् (pratyag) innermost आंतरिक
एक (eka) one एक
रसम् (rasam) essence सार
पूर्णम् (pūrṇam) full, complete पूर्ण
अनन्तम् (anantam) infinite अनंत
सर्वतः (sarvataḥ) everywhere हर जगह
मुखम् (mukham) facing, aspect मुख
एकम् (ekam) one एक
एव (eva) only केवल
अद्वयम् (advayam) non-dual अद्वैत
ब्रह्म (brahma) Brahman ब्रह्म
न (na) not नहीं
इह (iha) here यहाँ
नानास्ति (nānā-asti) multiplicity exists अनेकता है
किञ्चन (kiñcana) whatsoever कुछ भी

कर्ता-क्रिया-विधान / S-V-O Tuples

कर्ता-क्रिया-विधान / Subject-Verb-Object (S-V-O) Tuples
कर्ता (Subject) क्रिया (Verb) विधान (Object) अंग्रेज़ी अनुवाद / English Translation हिंदी अनुवाद / Hindi Translation
ब्रह्म अस्ति एकम्-एव-अद्वयम् Brahman is one only, non-dual. ब्रह्म केवल एक, अद्वैत है।
अस्ति नाना There is no multiplicity. कोई अनेकता नहीं है।

Important Concepts (महत्वपूर्ण अवधारणाएँ)

Categories (वर्गीकरण)

  • Non-duality
  • Brahman
  • Oneness

Commentary (टीका)

This verse underscores the monistic philosophy of Advaita Vedanta. Brahman is described as the singular, non-dual reality that pervades all existence, complete and infinite. The imagery of pratyag-eka-rasam (innermost essence) and sarvato-mukham (all-facing) suggests its omnipresence. In the ultimate reality of Brahman, diverse forms and dualities vanish, for it is undivided and whole. This teaching invites aspirants to switch from the perception of multiplicity to the realization of oneness, echoing the core tenet of advaita that beyond the changing phenomena lies the unchanging truth.