kami Meaning in Bengali
এক শিন্তো দেবতার (প্রকৃতির বিশিষ্ট পুরুষদের বাহিনীর পৌরাণিক মানুষ প্রফুল্লতা সহ
Similer Words:
kamichikamikazes
kamiks
kampongs
kampuchea
kampuchean
kampucheans
kampur
kamseen
kana
kanak
kanaka
kanakas
kanaks
kanarese
kami's Usage Examples:
revolves around the kami ("gods" or "spirits"), supernatural entities believed to inhabit all things.
The link between the kami and the natural world.
One of the major deities (kami) of Shinto, she is.
Kaya-no-hime Kawaya no Kami, kami of the toilet.
Kawa-no-kami a god of rivers.
Kagu-tsuchi, the kami of fire.
god(s)") is a structure whose main purpose is to house ("enshrine") one or more kami.
Inari Ōkami (Japanese: 稲荷大神), also called Ō-Inari (大稲荷), is the Japanese kami of foxes, fertility, rice, tea and sake, of agriculture and industry, of.
agriculturally-based folk religion, and the Shinto pantheon holds countless kami (Japanese for "god(s)" or "spirits").
imperial messengers to be sent to report important events to the guardian kami of Japan.
Yama-no-Kami (山の神) is the name given to a kami of the mountains of the Shinto religion of Japan.
She is also referred to as Izanami no kami.
大気津比売神, Ōgetsu-hime/ Ohogetsu-hime-no-kami), commonly known as Ukemochi (Japanese: 保食神, Hepburn: Ukemochi-no-kami, English: "Goddess Who Protects Food").
Izanagi (イザナギ) or Izanaki (イザナキ) is a creator deity (kami) in Japanese mythology.
Ta-no-Kami is also called Noushin (kami of agriculture) or kami of peasants.
Ta-no-Kami shares the kami of corn, the kami of water and the kami of defense.
In Shinto, shintai (神体, "body of the kami"), or go-shintai (御神体, "sacred body of the kami") when the honorific prefix go- is used, are physical objects.
The Japanese word kamikaze is usually translated as "divine wind" (kami is the word for "god", "spirit", or "divinity", and kaze for "wind").
from the Japanese words kaminari (雷, meaning "thunder"; on-reading rai) and kami (神, meaning "god"; on-reading shin or jin).
kami's Meaning':
one the Shinto deities (including mythological beings spirits of distinguished men forces of nature