the unbeatable, unfadeable, untouhable big daddy namahs
im something like a god in the streets son!
everything your mother ever wanted in a man
im something like a god in the streets son!
everything your mother ever wanted in a man
by really real October 27, 2008
Get the namahs mug.The weird in me recognises and bows to the weird in you.
interjection.
Used as a salutation among weirdos to express a greeting or farewell alongside acknowledgement of kinship in weirdness & unison in the weird.
interjection.
Used as a salutation among weirdos to express a greeting or farewell alongside acknowledgement of kinship in weirdness & unison in the weird.
Namastrange my friend, I feel we're gonna get into some freaky shit together.
The only way to bow to divine weirdness in another entity is to look them in the fourth eye and say namastrange.
The only way to bow to divine weirdness in another entity is to look them in the fourth eye and say namastrange.
by ivanji February 17, 2021
Get the Namastrange mug.Related Words
namahs
• namahsree
• Namaste
• namash
• Namaslay
• namaho
• namas'cray
• namasec
• Namaste Cunt
• Namasvi
A deep spiritual greeting when meeting and departing from others.
Sanskrit, pronounced "Nah-mah-skar".
It is usually said with an accompanying action - holding the palms of the hand flat together and touching the thumbs first to the "third eye" area between the eyebrows and then touching the thumbs to the heart.
It means "With all the depths and charms of my mind and all the love and cordiality of my heart, the divinity within me greets the divinity within you". This meaning is the ideation kept in mind when givning the greeting.
Related to namaste, which is often used in the same way, but which was originally intended as a respectful greeting to God alone. Namaskar, on the other hand, is always used as a greeting to other people - eiher friends or strangers.
Street version: skar.
Sanskrit, pronounced "Nah-mah-skar".
It is usually said with an accompanying action - holding the palms of the hand flat together and touching the thumbs first to the "third eye" area between the eyebrows and then touching the thumbs to the heart.
It means "With all the depths and charms of my mind and all the love and cordiality of my heart, the divinity within me greets the divinity within you". This meaning is the ideation kept in mind when givning the greeting.
Related to namaste, which is often used in the same way, but which was originally intended as a respectful greeting to God alone. Namaskar, on the other hand, is always used as a greeting to other people - eiher friends or strangers.
Street version: skar.
Namaskar James! (*holding hands together and touching thumbs to third eye and heart*). I haven't seen you for ages!
by Premasagar March 21, 2005
Get the Namaskar mug.an ancient Sanskrit greeting still in everyday use in India and especially on the trail in the Nepal Himalaya. Translated roughly, it means "I bow to the God within you", or "The Spirit within me salutes the Spirit in you" - a knowing that we are all made from the same One Divine Consciousness.
The more formal greeting Sanskrit Namascar pronounced NAH-mah-scar is also used in India, though less frequently in Nepal. The Hindi "Jai Bhagwan" is also in common use, and carries the same meaning.
by Daniel Gryte November 28, 2003
Get the Namaste mug.by sOmaHawk September 25, 2013
Get the namaho mug.Namaste, Brightlight!. . . Namaste, Sunshine!
by sunshinelynn September 2, 2003
Get the Namaste mug.“Namaslay” is a life philosophy that mixes old-world yogic principles with a modern can-do attitude. It marries namaste, the ancient yogic greeting that means “the light in me acknowledges the light in you,” and the contemporary slang term slay, which for our purposes means “to go out there and kill it at whatever it is you're working on—your job, your relationship, your life.”
Namaslay all day!
by Enigmanlyman February 22, 2018
Get the Namaslay mug.