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triliteral
[ trahy-lit-er-uhl ]
adjective
- using or consisting of three letters.
- (of Semitic roots) consisting of three consonants.
noun
- a triliteral word or root.
triliteral
/ ٰɪˈɪəə /
adjective
- having three letters
- (of a word root in Semitic languages) consisting of three consonants
noun
- a word root of three consonants
yvlog History and Origins
Origin of triliteral1
Example Sentences
He triplicates himself into three persons or powers, Brahma, Vishnu, and Siva, the Creator, the Preserver, and the Destroyer, or Reproducer; and is designated by the word Om or Aum by the respective letters of which sacred triliteral syllable are expressed the powers into which he triplicates himself.
Triliteral, trī-lit′ėr-al, adj. consisting of three letters.—n.
The advantage of Egyptian, that it is represented in texts of 3000 B.C., while the sister tongues exist only in forms 5000 years later, allows us, e.g. to trace the Semitic principle of triliteral roots more clearly in Egyptian; but still the latter tongue is hardly more characteristically archaic or nearer Semitic than Beja or Kabylic.
“Brahma milked out as it were, from the three Vedas the letter A, the letter U, and the letter M, which form by their coalition the triliteral monosyllable, together with three mysterious words, bhur, bhuva, and siver.”
“The great immutable words preceded by the triliteral syllable and followed by the gayatri, which consists of three measures, must be considered as the mouth or principal part of the Veda.”
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