باره बारह bārah, बारा bārā
H باره बारह bārah, बारा bārā, s.m. Land next to, or surrounding, a village (=bārāh, q.v.).
باره बारह bārah
H باره बारह bārah [S. द्वादशन्], adj. Twelve;—bārahoṅ, coll. n. The whole twelve, the twelve:—bārah-bāṭ, adj. lit. 'Twelve roads'; scattered, dispersed, cast to the winds, ruined, destroyed; embarrassed, bewildered, perplexed, distracted, confounded; at sixes and sevens, in confusion; at variance, in a state of discord;—bārah-bāṭ karnā, v.t. To scatter, disperse, throw into confusion, confound; to ruin, destroy;—bārah bāṭ honā or ho-jānā, v.n. To be scattered, &c., to become houseless, ruined, &c., to be a vagabond; to be abandoned:—bārah-bānī, adj. & s.m. Generally praised or approved, pure, perfect, genuine, good; sound, hale, hearty, well, convalescent;—the most refined, the purest (gold, water, &c.):—bārah patthar, s.m. The twelve pillars which mark the boundary of a cantonment or encampment; the cantonment or encampment so bounded:—bārah-pulī, adj. & s.m. Having twelve arches;—a bridge with twelve arches:—bārah-darī, bārah-dwārī, s.f. lit. 'Having twelve doors'; a summerhouse (generally in a garden):—bārah-singhā, s.m. lit. 'Having twelve tines'; a stag, antelope (?):—bārah-khaṛī, s.f.=bārā-khaṛī, q.v.s.v. bārā:—bārah-māsā, adj. & s.m. Pertaining to the twelve months of the year;—Hindī verse of twelve stanzas, corresponding to the twelve months of the year, and descriptive of the pain of separation from a husband, as also of the characteristic changes of the season, the scenery, and the pastimes which distinguish each month:—bārah mahine, adv. The whole twelve months, all the year round, at all times, always, perpetually:—bārah-wafāt, s.f. The twelve days of Moham mad's fatal illness.
بدهہ बुध budh
H بدهہ बुध budh, s.f.=buddhi, q.v.
بره ba-rah for ba-rāh
P بره ba-rah (for ba-rāh), adv. In or on the way;—s.m. Provisions for a journey.
باراه बाराह bārāh
H باراه बाराह bārāh [S. वराह], s.m. Hog, boar; the third or boar-incarnation of Vishṇu (in which he raised the earth from the bottom of the sea with his tusks); the earth or land so raised; land next to a village (see barāh and varāh).