Sanjai

"Variant of Sanjay. Triumphant, victorious"

♂ Masculin · Hindi, Sanskrit
sanskrit epic indian variant

📖 À propos Sanjai

Sanjai est une variante orthographique de Sanjay, un nom sanskrit derive de sanjaya, signifiant 'entierement victorieux' — un compose de sam- (completement) et jaya (victoire). Le nom resonne profondement dans la tradition hindoue a travers le Mahabharata, ou Sanjaya etait le cocher-narrateur dote d'une vision divine qui temoigna de la bataille de Kurukshetra et en relaya les evenements — dont la Bhagavad Gita — au roi aveugle Dhritarashtra. Cet heritage litteraire confere au nom une dimension spirituelle de clarte et de temoignage moral, au-dela de sa signification triomphale. Populaire dans tout le sous-continent indien et sa diaspora, Sanjay/Sanjai a ete porte par des politiciens, artistes, medecins et sportifs qui ont facon la culture indienne et sud-asiatique moderne.

📍 Détails

  • OrigineHindi, Sanskrit
  • Genre♂ Masculin
  • SignificationVariant of Sanjay. Triumphant, victorious

🔀 Variantes et Prénoms Associés

⭐ Personnes Célèbres

  • Sanjay Gandhi — Indian politician and the younger son of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. A highly influential figure in the Indian National Congress during the 1970s, he played a controversial role during the Emergency period (1975-77).
  • Sanjay Dutt — Bollywood actor and cultural icon, known for blockbuster films spanning four decades. His turbulent personal life and legal battles became the subject of the acclaimed biographical film Sanju (2018).
  • Sanjay Gupta — American neurosurgeon and Emmy Award-winning chief medical correspondent for CNN, known for bringing accessible medical journalism to millions worldwide, particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • Sanjaya (Mahabharata) — Legendary figure in the Hindu epic Mahabharata — charioteer and minister of King Dhritarashtra, gifted with divine vision to narrate the Battle of Kurukshetra, making him the original narrator of the Bhagavad Gita.
  • Sanjay Manjrekar — Former Indian cricketer who played 37 Test matches for India and went on to become one of the most prominent cricket commentators and analysts in South Asian broadcasting.