बिमल (Bimal)

Definition

Pure, spotless, unblemished, immaculate

Etymology

  • Sanskrit: विमल (vimala)
  • Prakrit: बिमल (bimala)
  • Modern Hindi: बिमल/विमल (bimal/vimal)

Linguistic Analysis

  1. Grammatical Form
  • Adjective
  • Qualitative descriptor
  • Attributive usage
  • Positive connotation
  1. Usage in Classical Literature
  • Common in devotional poetry
  • Used in sacred texts
  • Found in spiritual descriptions
  • Frequent in bhakti literature

Usage in Hanuman Chalisa

  1. Context
  • Describes Lord Rama’s glory
  • Qualifies divine attributes
  • Part of opening verse
  • Sets pure tone
  1. Significance
  • Indicates divine purity
  • Represents perfection
  • Suggests transcendence
  • Implies spiritual excellence

Spiritual Significance

  1. As Divine Quality
  • Perfect purity
  • Spiritual cleanliness
  • Divine attribute
  • Transcendental nature
  1. Devotional Aspects
  • Object of meditation
  • Quality to aspire for
  • Divine characteristic
  • Spiritual ideal
  • Nirmal (Pure)
  • Ujjwal (Bright)
  • Pavitra (Sacred)
  • Shuddha (Clean)

Cultural Context

  1. In Bhakti Tradition
  • Divine attribute
  • Spiritual quality
  • Devotional descriptor
  • Sacred characteristic
  1. Literary Usage
  • Poetic embellishment
  • Divine description
  • Spiritual metaphor
  • Sacred symbolism

Would you like me to proceed with the analysis of “Jasu” next?​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​