बिमल (Bimal)
Definition
Pure, spotless, unblemished, immaculate
Etymology
- Sanskrit: विमल (vimala)
- Prakrit: बिमल (bimala)
- Modern Hindi: बिमल/विमल (bimal/vimal)
Linguistic Analysis
- Grammatical Form
- Adjective
- Qualitative descriptor
- Attributive usage
- Positive connotation
- Usage in Classical Literature
- Common in devotional poetry
- Used in sacred texts
- Found in spiritual descriptions
- Frequent in bhakti literature
Usage in Hanuman Chalisa
- Context
- Describes Lord Rama’s glory
- Qualifies divine attributes
- Part of opening verse
- Sets pure tone
- Significance
- Indicates divine purity
- Represents perfection
- Suggests transcendence
- Implies spiritual excellence
Spiritual Significance
- As Divine Quality
- Perfect purity
- Spiritual cleanliness
- Divine attribute
- Transcendental nature
- Devotional Aspects
- Object of meditation
- Quality to aspire for
- Divine characteristic
- Spiritual ideal
Related Terms
- Nirmal (Pure)
- Ujjwal (Bright)
- Pavitra (Sacred)
- Shuddha (Clean)
Cultural Context
- In Bhakti Tradition
- Divine attribute
- Spiritual quality
- Devotional descriptor
- Sacred characteristic
- Literary Usage
- Poetic embellishment
- Divine description
- Spiritual metaphor
- Sacred symbolism
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