- Ap (water)
"Ap" ("IAST|áp-") is the
Vedic Sanskrit term for "water", inClassical Sanskrit occurring only in the plural, "IAST|āpas" (sometimes re-analysed as a thematic singular, "IAST|āpa-"), whenceHindi "IAST|āp". The term is fromPIE "hxap" "water".TheIndo-Iranian word survives also, as the Persian word for water, "Aab", e.g. in "Punjab" (from "IAST|pañcāpas" "five waters"). In archaicablaut ing contractions, thelaryngeal of the PIE root remains visible in Vedic Sanskrit, e.g. "IAST|pratīpa-" "against the current", from "*PIE|proti-hxp-o-". The word has many cognates in archaic European toponyms (e.g. "Mess-apia", perhaps also "Avon ").In the
Rigveda , several hymns are dedicated to "the waters" ("IAST|āpas"): 7.49, 10.9, 10.30, 10.47. In the oldest of these, 7.49, the waters are connected with the draught ofIndra (Soma , referred to as "the offspring of water", "IAST|napāt apām").In
Hindu philosophy , the term refers to water as an element, one of the "Panchamahabhuta," or "five great elements". InHinduism , it is also the name of the deva, apersonification of water, (one of theVasu s in most laterPuranic lists).In the Thai language, "ap" refers to a splashing of water, and "nam" is water. Therefore a showerbath is called "ap nam". Many Thai words have roots in Sanskrit.
ee also
*āpō, the Avestan concept of the "the waters"
*Rigvedic rivers
*Old European hydronymy
*Sea and river deity
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