Agni – מילון אנגלי-עברי
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Agni
Agni (
Agni), pronounced " ag'ne ", is the
Rigvedic deity of fire and the conveyor of sacrifices to the Gods. He is also a god of divine knowledge, who leads man to the gods. He was one of the most important of the
Vedic gods.
Agni (missile)
The
Agni missile (
Sanskrit: अग्नि,
Agnī, "fire", also the
Hindu god of fire) is a family of
medium to
intercontinental range ballistic missiles developed by
India, named after one of the
five elements of nature. Agni Missiles are long range, nuclear weapons capable surface to surface ballistic missile. The first missile of the series, Agni-I was developed under the
Integrated Guided Missile Development Program and tested in 1991. After its success, Agni missile program was separated from the IGMDP upon realizing its strategic importance. It was designated as a special program in India's defence budget and provided adequate funds for subsequent development. As of 2008, the Agni missile family comprises three deployed variants while two more variants are under testing:
Agni-I
The two-stage
Agni technology demonstrator, with a solid-fuel first stage, was first tested at the Interim Test Range in Chandipur in 1989. It was capable of carrying a conventional payload of 1,000 kg (2,200 lb) or a nuclear warhead. This original technology demonstrator evolved into the solid-fuel Agni-1 and Agni-2 missiles. India first developed the two-stage 2000 km range Agni-2, testing it in 1999. It then used the first stage of this system to develop the 700 km range single-stage Agni-1, which was first tested in January 2002.
Agni
Noun
1. (Sanskrit) god of fire in ancient and traditional India; one of the three chief deities of the Vedas
(hypernym) Hindu deity
(classification) Sanskrit, Sanskritic language
ağ
n.
fishnet, net for catching fish, net, netting, network; spider's web; cobweb, dragnet, filet, graticule, mesh
Agni
(pl. )
of Agnus
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913), edited by Noah Porter.
About
Agni
[Hindu] Agni is one of the most important of the Vedic gods. He is the god of fire, the messenger of the gods, the acceptor of sacrifice. Agni is in everyone's hearth; he is the vital spark of life, and so a part of him is in all living things; he is the fire which consumes food in peoples' stomachs, as well as the fire which consumes the offerings to the gods. He is the fire of the sun, in the lightening bolt, and in the smoke column which holds up the heavens. The stars are sparks from his flame. He was so important to the ancient Indians that 200 hymns in the Rig Veda are addressed to him, and eight of its ten books begin with praises dedicated to him. Agni is closely associated with Indra, and is sometimes said to be his twin brother. Thus Dyaus Pita and Prthivi are named as two of his parents. But he has many more. Sometimes Kasyapa and Aditi are his parents; another time he is the son of a queen who keeps his birth secret from her king. He was born, like Indra, in full power a...
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