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mõni

Mâni, with diacritics, is a transliteration variant of Mani that appears in several languages and cultural contexts. It can refer to a historical figure, a personal name, or a form of traditional verse, depending on language and usage.

The most prominent reference is Mani (c. 216–272 CE), the prophet and founder of Manichaeism. Mani proposed

As a given name or surname, Mâni is used in several cultures, particularly in South Asia, the

In Turkish and related Turkic literatures, mani (also written manî) denotes a traditional short verse form,

Because Mâni traverses multiple languages and traditions, its precise meaning is usually clear only from accompanying

a
dualistic
cosmology
in
which
light
and
darkness
are
in
endless
conflict.
He
traveled
widely
along
ancient
trade
routes
to
teach
his
synthesis
of
Christian,
Zoroastrian,
and
Buddhist
elements.
After
his
death,
Manichaeism
spread
across
the
Roman
and
Persian
spheres
and
reached
Central
and
East
Asia
before
later
suppression
by
various
authorities.
The
tradition
influenced
later
religious
thought
and
literature,
even
as
it
declined
as
a
public
movement.
Middle
East,
and
parts
of
the
Balkans.
A
widely
known
bearer
is
Mani
Ratnam
(born
1956),
an
Indian
film
director
and
producer
celebrated
for
films
such
as
Roja
and
Bombay.
The
name
appears
in
other
contexts
as
well,
reflecting
regional
naming
practices
rather
than
a
single,
unified
identity.
typically
a
four-line
stanza
used
in
folk
songs
and
oral
storytelling.
The
form
occupies
a
place
in
cultural
and
literary
history
and
is
studied
in
the
context
of
regional
poetics
and
heritage.
text
or
cultural
context.