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Reference

Glossary

Sanskrit and Hindi terms you'll meet in the Gita, explained simply.

A

Abhimanyu अभिमन्यु
Arjuna's brave young son who learned to enter the Chakravyuha battle formation but not how to escape it.
acharya आचार्य
A teacher or master — someone who teaches by both words and the example of their life.
ahankara अहंकार
The ego — the feeling of "I" and "mine" that makes you think you are separate from everything else.
akarma अकर्म
Inaction — refusing to act. The Gita teaches that mere avoidance of work does not lead to freedom.
akshara अक्षर
The imperishable — that which never changes or dies. The eternal witness within every being.
Arjuna अर्जुन
The third Pandava brother — the greatest archer in the world. Krishna is his charioteer and guide.
ashvattha अश्वत्थ
The sacred fig tree (peepal). In Chapter 15, Krishna describes a cosmic upside-down ashvattha whose roots grow upward into heaven.
asura असुर
A being driven by ego and desire — the opposite nature of the devas.
atman आत्मन्
The soul — the real you that lives inside every being. It cannot be cut, burned, or destroyed. Unchanging and eternal. In its deepest nature, the atman is not different from Brahman.
avatar अवतार
A form that God takes when coming to Earth. Krishna is an avatar of Vishnu.

B

bhakti भक्ति
Devotion and loving surrender to God. One of the main paths to spiritual freedom.
Bhima भीम
The second Pandava — immensely strong and fiercely loyal to his brothers. Wielder of the great mace.
Bhishma भीष्म
The great-grandfather of both Pandavas and Kauravas. Bound by a terrible vow, he fights on the Kaurava side.
Brahman ब्रह्मन्
The ultimate reality — the one infinite awareness that IS everything in the universe. Not a being among other beings, but the ground of all existence.
buddhi बुद्धि
The intellect — the part of your mind that decides, discerns right from wrong, and understands clearly.

C

Chakravyuha चक्रव्यूह
A deadly spiral battle formation. Abhimanyu famously broke into one but could not find his way out.
chandas छन्दस्
Vedic hymns — the sacred verses and metres in which ancient wisdom is preserved and chanted.

D

deha देह
The physical body — the "clothing" the soul wears. Bodies change, but the soul inside them does not.
dehin देहिन्
The embodied one — the soul that lives inside a body, like a person wearing clothes.
deva देव
A shining one — a god or divine being in the world of light.
dharma धर्म
The right way to live — your duty, righteousness, and the natural order of things.
Dhritarashtra धृतराष्ट्र
The blind king of Hastinapura. Father of the hundred Kauravas. He asks Sanjaya to describe the battle.
Drona द्रोण
Dronacharya — the royal teacher of archery who trained both the Pandavas and Kauravas. Fights for the Kauravas.
Duryodhana दुर्योधन
The eldest Kaurava prince. Proud and jealous, he refused to share the kingdom with his Pandava cousins.
dvandva द्वन्द्व
Pairs of opposites — pleasure and pain, heat and cold, gain and loss. The wise person stays steady through them all.
dvesha द्वेष
Aversion — the push away from things you dislike. The opposite of raga, and equally blinding.

G

guna गुण
One of three qualities of nature — sattva (goodness), rajas (passion), tamas (inertia) — that shape everything in the world.
guru गुरु
A spiritual teacher who guides you from darkness toward light and understanding.

H

Hastinapura हस्तिनापुर
The great capital city of the Kuru dynasty — where the palace, the court, and the fateful dice game all took place.

I

indriya इन्द्रिय
A sense organ — eyes, ears, nose, tongue, skin. The five doorways through which the world enters your mind.

J

jnana ज्ञान
Knowledge or wisdom — especially the deep understanding of the true nature of reality.

K

kama काम
Desire or craving — the wanting that makes you reach for more and more, like a fire that is never satisfied.
karma कर्म
Action, and the results that come from your actions. Every deed has a consequence.
Karna कर्ण
A great warrior raised as a charioteer's son, but secretly the eldest son of Kunti. Loyal to Duryodhana.
kashmala कश्मल
Weakness or dejection — the faint-heartedness that overcomes Arjuna at the start of Krishna's teaching.
Kaurava कौरव
The hundred sons of King Dhritarashtra, led by Duryodhana. Rivals of the Pandavas.
Krishna कृष्ण
An avatar of Lord Vishnu who serves as Arjuna's charioteer. He speaks the teachings of the Gita.
krodha क्रोध
Anger — the fierce heat that rises when desire is blocked. Krishna calls it the great enemy of wisdom.
kshara क्षर
The perishable — everything in the world that changes, decays, and passes away.
kshatriya क्षत्रिय
A warrior — one whose dharma is to protect people and fight for justice.
kshetra क्षेत्र
A field — can mean a battlefield or the body where life's experiences happen.
Kunti कुन्ती
Mother of the Pandavas — a queen of great strength and devotion who raised her sons through hardship.
kuru कुरु
The ancient royal family. Both the Pandavas and Kauravas belong to the Kuru dynasty.
Kurukshetra कुरुक्षेत्र
The sacred battlefield where the great war of the Mahabharata was fought.

L

lokasangraha लोकसंग्रह
Holding the world together — acting for the welfare of all beings, not just yourself. The true purpose of karma yoga.

M

Mahabharata महाभारत
One of the two great Indian epics. The Bhagavad Gita is a part of this enormous story.
manas मनस्
The mind — the part of you that thinks, feels, worries, and imagines.
mantra मन्त्र
Sacred words or sounds that carry spiritual power when chanted or meditated upon.
maya माया
The power of appearance — the reason the one Brahman appears as many separate things. Not an illusion that doesn't exist, but a veil that hides the deeper unity beneath.
moksha मोक्ष
Liberation — the realization that you were never truly bound. Freedom from the cycle of birth and death through knowledge of your true Self.

N

Nakula नकुल
The fourth Pandava — twin brother of Sahadeva, known for his skill with horses and his striking beauty.
nirvana निर्वाण
Liberation — freedom from the cycle of birth and death. The final peace.
nishkarmya नैष्कर्म्य
Freedom from the bondage of action — not by avoiding work, but by doing it without selfish desire.

P

Pandava पाण्डव
The five sons of King Pandu — Yudhishthira, Bhima, Arjuna, Nakula, and Sahadeva. The heroes of the Mahabharata.
paramatma परमात्मा
The Supreme Self — the great soul that holds all other souls, the way the sky holds all the stars.
prajna प्रज्ञा
Wisdom — deep understanding that comes from seeing things as they truly are, not just knowing facts.
prakriti प्रकृति
Nature — the material world that everything physical is made of, including your body and mind.
prana प्राण
Life-breath — the vital energy that flows through every living being. Without prana, the body cannot live.
purusha पुरुष
The spirit or consciousness — the witness that observes but is not changed by nature.
purushottama पुरुषोत्तम
The Supreme Person — higher than both the perishable world and the imperishable soul. Krishna's ultimate title.

R

raga राग
Attachment — the pull you feel toward things you like. One of the two guards that block clear seeing.
rajas रजस्
Passion, activity, and restlessness. The guna that drives desire and action.
rajasic राजसिक
Passionate and restless — food, actions, or thoughts that stir up desire and agitation.
rasa रस
Taste or essence — the lingering pull of past pleasures that remains even when the object is gone.
rishi ऋषि
A sage or seer — someone who has realized deep spiritual truths through meditation.

S

Sahadeva सहदेव
The youngest Pandava — twin brother of Nakula, known for his wisdom and knowledge of the stars.
samadhi समाधि
Deep absorption — the state where the mind is perfectly still and focused, like a lamp in a windless place, united with the divine.
samatva समत्व
Equanimity — being balanced in success and failure, pleasure and pain. Krishna says this IS yoga.
samsara संसार
The cycle of birth, death, and rebirth that every soul goes through until it reaches moksha.
Sanjaya सञ्जय
Dhritarashtra's charioteer and advisor, blessed with divine sight to see the entire battlefield from far away.
sankhya सांख्य
A way of knowing through wisdom and reasoning — one of the two paths Krishna teaches. It tells apart the real (the soul) from the unreal (the material world).
sannyasa संन्यास
Renunciation — giving up attachment to actions and their results. A path of letting go.
sattva सत्त्व
Goodness, purity, and harmony. The guna that brings clarity, peace, and wisdom.
sattvik सात्त्विक
Pure and harmonious — food, actions, or thoughts that bring clarity and goodness.
shloka श्लोक
A verse or couplet in Sanskrit poetry. The Gita is written in shlokas.
siddhi सिद्धि
Perfection or accomplishment — the success that comes from dedicated, selfless practice.
soma सोम
The moon — source of nourishing nectar. Krishna says he becomes the moon to feed the sap of all plants.
sthitaprajna स्थितप्रज्ञ
One whose wisdom is steady and unshaken — a person who stays calm no matter what happens.
swadharma स्वधर्म
Your own duty — the particular role and responsibility that is yours to fulfill, based on your nature.

T

tamas तमस्
Darkness, laziness, and confusion. The guna that causes ignorance and inaction.
tamasic तामसिक
Dull and confused — food, actions, or thoughts that lead to laziness and ignorance.
tapas तपस्
Self-discipline — training yourself through effort, patience, and sometimes giving things up.

V

vaishvanara वैश्वानर
The universal fire — the divine flame in every belly that digests food. Krishna says "I am the fire in all beings."
varna वर्ण
A social group based on one's nature and work — not birth. The Gita describes four varnas.
vedanta वेदान्त
The end (conclusion) of the Vedas — the Upanishads, which contain the deepest teachings about the self and reality.
vishada विषाद
Deep sorrow, despair, or grief. Chapter 1 is called "Arjuna Vishada Yoga."
Vishnu विष्णु
The Supreme Preserver — one of the three great gods. Krishna is his avatar, descended to earth in human form.

Y

yajna यज्ञ
An offering or sacrifice — sharing what you have with the world as an act of devotion.
yoga योग
A way of connecting with something greater. It can mean discipline, union, or a spiritual path.
Yudhishthira युधिष्ठिर
The eldest Pandava — known for his unwavering truthfulness and commitment to dharma. Also called Dharmaraja.