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Telugu

avalu in tamil

Inglês

white avalu

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Telugu

alasandalu in tamil

Inglês

alasandalu in tamil

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Telugu

avalu in scientific name

Inglês

avalu

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Telugu

annam tinnavaa in tamil

Inglês

அன்னம் தின்னவா தமிழில்

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Telugu

macha meaning in tamil

Inglês

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Telugu

bad words in tamil madarchod

Inglês

madarchod

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Telugu

pogaru pothu meaning in tamil

Inglês

pogaru pothu meaning in tamil

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Telugu

pundai meaning of pundai in tamil

Inglês

pundai meaning of pundai in tamil

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Telugu

nenu ninnu premistunnanu in tamil language meaning

Inglês

nenu ninnu premistunnanu

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Telugu

kuchipudi, like other classical dance forms in india, traces its roots to the sanskrit natya shastra, a foundational treatise on the performing arts.[4][5] its first complete compilation is dated to between 200 bce and 200 ce,[27][28] but estimates vary between 500 bce and 500 ce.[29] the most studied version of the natya shastra text consists of about 6000 verses structured into 36 chapters.[27][30] the text, states natalia lidova, describes the theory of tāṇḍava dance (shiva), the theory of rasa, of bhāva, expression, gestures, acting techniques, basic steps, standing postures – all of which are part of indian classical dances.[27][31] dance and performance arts, states this ancient text,[32] are a form of expression of spiritual ideas, virtues and the essence of scriptures.[33] the dance-drama tradition in andhra pradesh is of ancient origins, and the region is mentioned in the natya shastra. bharata muni credits a graceful movement to andhra region and discusses it as kaishiki vritti. the pre-2nd century ce text calls one raga as andhri, that is from andhra.[34] the andhri, is related to gandhari and arsabhi, and is discussed in many other 1st millennium sanskrit texts.[35] some, state bruno nettle and others, place the origins of kuchipudi to 3rd century bce.[15] dance-drama performance arts related to shaivism, in telugu-speaking parts of south india, are evidenced in 10th-century copper inscriptions, and these were called brahmana melas or brahma melas.[8][36] the medieval era dance-drama performance artists were brahmins.[37][38] this art was likely adopted by the musical and dancing bhakti traditions of vaishnavism which grew in the 2nd millennium, whose devotees were called bhagvatulus in andhra region and bhagvatars in tamil region of south india.[8] in andhra, this performance art evolved into kuchipudi, while in tamil nadu it became known as bhagavata mela nataka.[8] according to saskia kersenboom, both the telugu kuchipudi and tamil bhagavata mela are stron

Inglês

kuchipudi, like other classical dance forms in india, traces its roots to the sanskrit natya shastra, a foundational treatise on the performing arts.[4][5] its first complete compilation is dated to between 200 bce and 200 ce,[27][28] but estimates vary between 500 bce and 500 ce.[29] the most studied version of the natya shastra text consists of about 6000 verses structured into 36 chapters.[27][30] the text, states natalia lidova, describes the theory of tāṇḍava dance (shiva), the theory of rasa, of bhāva, expression, gestures, acting techniques, basic steps, standing postures – all of which are part of indian classical dances.[27][31] dance and performance arts, states this ancient text,[32] are a form of expression of spiritual ideas, virtues and the essence of scriptures.[33] the dance-drama tradition in andhra pradesh is of ancient origins, and the region is mentioned in the natya shastra. bharata muni credits a graceful movement to andhra region and discusses it as kaishiki vritti. the pre-2nd century ce text calls one raga as andhri, that is from andhra.[34] the andhri, is related to gandhari and arsabhi, and is discussed in many other 1st millennium sanskrit texts.[35] some, state bruno nettle and others, place the origins of kuchipudi to 3rd century bce.[15] dance-drama performance arts related to shaivism, in telugu-speaking parts of south india, are evidenced in 10th-century copper inscriptions, and these were called brahmana melas or brahma melas.[8][36] the medieval era dance-drama performance artists were brahmins.[37][38] this art was likely adopted by the musical and dancing bhakti traditions of vaishnavism which grew in the 2nd millennium, whose devotees were called bhagvatulus in andhra region and bhagvatars in tamil region of south india.[8] in andhra, this performance art evolved into kuchipudi, while in tamil nadu it became known as bhagavata mela nataka.[8] according to saskia kersenboom, both the telugu kuchipudi and tamil bhagavata mela are strongly related to the classical hindu dance tradition of yakshagana found in karnataka, all three involve carnatic music, but these dance-drama traditions have differences such as in costumes, structure, interpretation and creative innovations.[15]

Última atualização: 2019-11-06
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