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adevrata

Adevrata is a term that appears infrequently in Sanskrit-language sources, and it is not a standard technical term in established Hindu legal, religious, or philosophical vocabularies. The word is generally read as a compound built from a- (a negation) and vrata (vow or observance), yielding a sense akin to “without a vow” or “not observing a vow.” Because it is rarely attested in primary texts, adevrata does not have a settled, widely cited definition or usage in mainstream scholarship.

Etymology and usage

The form is typically analyzed as a negated vrata rather than as a fixed, widely used category.

Attestation and scholarly status

Adevrata remains obscure in comparative and historical studies of dharma, vow-taking, and devotional practice. It is

See also

Vrata, Vow (religious observance), Dharma, Hindu law, Sanskrit philology.

Note

Due to limited attestation, any specific claims about adevrata should be checked against primary texts or scholarly

In
discussions
where
it
appears,
adevrata
is
discussed
as
a
descriptor
rather
than
as
a
named
practice
or
doctrinal
category.
Its
appearance
is
sporadic
and
largely
confined
to
lexical,
textual,
or
philological
notes
rather
than
constituting
a
coherent
doctrinal
concept
across
schools.
not
treated
as
a
canonical
term
in
major
Sanskrit
dictionaries
or
in
the
standard
corpora
of
Hindu
legal
and
devotional
literature.
Consequently,
references
to
adevrata
are
limited,
and
the
term
often
serves
as
a
linguistic
or
contextual
observation
rather
than
a
foundational
concept.
apparatus
that
discuss
rare
or
obscure
Sanskrit
forms.