Star venus & indus symbols & facts about star venus .
1.
2. the Sanskrit for "clear, pure" or "brightness,
clearness", is the name of the son of and Ushana,
and preceptor of theDaityas, and the guru of
the Asuras, He is nature and
represents wealth,pleasure and reproduction .
In the Sanskrit language of
, the was called
the Sindhu.
Other rivers such as the join the
Indus as it flows down to the sea. The Indus
Valley civilisation is sometimes called the
3. A valley is a physical feature. It's the land
shaped by a river. A valley can be V-shaped or
U-shaped. A river can also create a wide, flat
'flood plain'. The Indus Valley was shaped by
the Indus River, and here people long ago built
some of the first cities.
Synecdoche is a class of metonymy
'mentioning a part for the
whole'. Greek συνεκδοχή synekdoche,
meaning "simultaneous understanding") is
a figure of speech in which a term for a part of
something refers to the whole of something, or
vice versa (Oxford English Dictionary).
Synecdoche is evident is in the orthography of
a pair of heads of a young bull to denote a pair
of young bulls -- as a reference to a related
object. Both metonymy and synecdoche are
considered sub-categories of metaphor. The
metaphor is achieved by the layering of rebus
in the cipher of the writing system: a word
which is a homonym of kōḍiya,
kōḍe, खखखख (p. 216) [ khōṇḍa ] m A young
bull, a bullcalf The rebus homonym
4. is kõdā ‘lathe-turner’; kũdār ‘turner, brass-
worker, engraver (writer)’.
In addition to synecdoche, the other master
tropes deployed in Indus Script corpora are:
Allegory is exemplified by the sustained
metaphor
for soma: ancu (Tocharian), amśu (Vedic).
Antanaclasis is exemplified by repetitions of a
single word with different meanings, like a
pun: Hieroglyphs: sãghāṛɔ 'lathe', sangaḍa
'portable furnace Rebus: saṁghara, 'living in
the same house'; sãgaṛh, 'fortification';
sangāṭh खखखखखख 'a collection (of implements,
tools, materials, for any object), apparatus,
furniture, a collection of the things wanted on
a journey, luggage, and so on'; sanghāta
gram. 'collection of words'.