![shri gopal sahastranaam stotram shri gopal sahastranaam stotram](https://www.astromantra.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/Shree-Gopal-Sahastranaam-Stotram-Book-1.jpg)
Pischel interprets Rudra as the 'red one', the 'brilliant one', possibly derived from a lost root rud-, 'red' or 'ruddy', or alternatively, according to Grassman, 'shining'. An alternative etymology suggested by Prof. In the Rigvedic verse ' rukh draavayathi, iti rudraha', rukh means 'sorrow/misery', draavayathi means 'to drive out/eliminate' and iti means 'that which' (or 'the one who'), implying that Rudra is the eliminator of evil and the usherer of peace. The name Rudra may thus be translated as 'the roarer'. It is usually derived from the Proto-Indo-European (PIE) root rud- (related to English rude), which means 'to cry, howl'. The etymology of the theonym Rudra is somewhat uncertain. Also, the name siva is used plenty of times in the same Anuvaka for invoking Rudra. Sadashiva, is the Supreme Being Lord Paramashiva in the Mantra marga Siddhanta sect of Shaivism. In Prathama anuvaka of Namakam ( Taittiriya Samhita 4.5), Sri Rudram the 'mightiest of the mighty' Rudra, is revered as Sadasiva (means 'mighty shiva') and Mahadeva. The Shri Rudram hymn from the Yajurveda is dedicated to Rudra and is important in the Saivism sect. Śarmā notes that it is used as a name of Shiva often in later languages. This name appears in the Shiva Sahasranama, and R. (could be a hurricane or tempest) or 'the most frightening one'. Depending upon the periodic situation, Rudra can mean 'the most severe roarer/howler' Rudra means "who eradicates problems from their roots". In the Rigveda, Rudra is praised as the 'mightiest of the mighty'.
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One translation of the name is 'the roarer'. Rudra ( / ˈ r ʊ d r ə/ Sanskrit: रुद्र) is a Rigvedic deity associated with wind or storm, Vayu and the hunt. Sthirebhiraṅghaiḥ pururūpa ughro babhruḥ śukrebhiḥ pipiśehiraṇyaiḥ īśānādasya bhuvanasya bhūrerna vā u yoṣad rudrādasuryam
SHRI GOPAL SAHASTRANAAM STOTRAM SKIN
Rudra wears a tiger skin and holds a trishula and a deer in his hands, also known as Shiva. Rudra, from a 19th-century textbook on Hinduism.