Do
you know the meaning of the names of all the months? The English months
are not in English; they are surprisingly connected with Sanskrit.
Do you know what December means; Das means ten and Ambar means sky, so December means the tenth sky.
Nav means nine in Sanskrit. November means the ninth sky.
October means the eighth month.
Sapt means seven, amber means sky, so Saptamber became September.
August is Shasht, which means sixth; so August is the sixth month.
January is the 11th month, February is the 12th month and March which
means going ahead – that is when the new year begins. That is when the
Sun arrives in the first point of Aries, at the end of March.
Even today, in Afghanistan, Iran and all these countries, they celebrate
March 21st as the new year day because this was the ancient vedic
concept. March means new. Feb means fag end. Don’t we say, ‘Fag end’,
that is February.
Why is 'March' the beginning of new year? Is
there some scientific significance/explanation? In fact, in India, we
celebrate the new year couple of times in a year: during March and also
during the Diwali celebrations. Why twice and what is the reason?
Each Day of the week is connected with a cosmic entity. Did you know
that Monday is the Moon’s day in most of the languages around the world?
Somavãra = Monday = Lundi = Moon
Lunar or Moon makes Monday the day of the Moon.
Names of the 7 Days and the Sanskrit connection:
Ravivãra: Sunday (day of Sun; Ravi means 'Sun' in Sanskrit)
Somavãra: Monday (day of Moon; Som means 'Moon' in Sanskrit)
Mañgalvãra: Tuesday (day of Mars; Mangal denotes Mars in Sanskrit)
Budhavãra: Wednesday (day of Mercury; Budh is the planet Mercury)
Guruvãra: Thursday (day of Jupiter; Guru is the planet Jupiter)
Shukravãra: Friday (day of Venus; Shukra is the planet Venus)
Shanivãra: Saturday (day of Saturn; Shani is the planet Saturn)
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