The meaning of the name “Rutvi” is: “Speech, season,very kind and honest”. Categories: Hindi Names, Hindu Names, Indian Names, Sanskrit Names.
Sava Name Meaning. Italian: habitational name from Sava in Taranto or the district so named in Baronissi, Salerno; the place name is probably from a pre-Latin element saba, sava 'ditch'. Romanian: from the personal name Sava (see Savas). Compare Serbian Savich, Polish Sawa, Sawicki. Greek: see Savas.
Sandilya (Rishi) ... One of the rishis was the progenitor of the ÅšÄṇá¸ilya gotra. The name was derived from the Sanskrit words Å›aṇ, full and dilam, the moon, with the derivative ya added, meaning the one of the full moon, thereby implying a priest or a descendant of the Moon God.
Teerthankar name brief: Teerthankar is baby boy name mainly popular in Hindu religion and its main origin is Hindi. Teerthankar name meanings is A Jain saint, Lord Vishnu.
English form of the Greek name Τιμοθεος (Timotheos) meaning "honouring God", derived from τιμαω (timao) "to honour" and θεος (theos) "god". Saint Timothy was a companion of Paul on his missionary journeys and was the recipient of two of Paul's epistles that appear in the New Testament.
In Jainism, a tirthankara (Sanskrit: tīrthaṅkara; English: literally a 'ford-maker') is a saviour and spiritual teacher of the dharma (righteous path). The word tirthankara signifies the founder of a tirtha, which is a fordable passage across the sea of interminable births and deaths, the saṃsāra.
Tukaram, also referred to as Sant Tukaram, Bhakta Tukaram, Tukaram Maharaj, Tukoba and Tukobaraya, was a 17th-century poet-saint of the Bhakti movement in Maharashtra. He was part of the egalitarian, personalized Varkari devotionalism tradition.
The Sanskrit name of Tulsidas can be transliterated in two ways. Using the original Sanskrit, the name is written as Tulasīdāsa. ... Tulsidas, which means a servant of the plant Tulsi.
Indian Meaning: The name Valmiki is an Indian baby name. In Indian the meaning of the name Valmiki is: Name of a poet.
Vyasa (/ˈvjɑːsə/; Sanskrit: व्यास, literally "Compiler") is a central and revered figure in most Hindu traditions. He is also sometimes called Veda Vyāsa (वेदव्यास, veda-vyāsa, "the one who classified the Vedas"), or Krishna Dvaipāyana (referring to his dark complexion and birthplace).