释义 |
Definition of bhava in English: bhavanounˈbɑːvə mass noun(in Indian dance and other performing arts) the emotion or mood conveyed by a performer. Example sentencesExamples - Coming from a family of traditional painters, he was able to evoke bhava within a visual medium.
- Dance became a passion in the sense of understanding bhava and arriving at the essence of what you're saying.
- Knowing musical nuances influences my depiction of "bhava" as a dancer.
- I can become ecstatic, dance and roll and shed tears and be overwhelmed with that bhava, drowned and intoxicated.
- In each chapter, the novelist creates the correct mood of the corresponding bhava.
- Dancing is the combination of physical exercise, mudras, bhava, body stretching, meditation and health awareness.
- While the nritta forms the pure dance steps, abhinaya is where the dancer expresses and experiences the various feelings or bhavas.
- The theory posits that any one of the eight permanent bhava will prevail in a particular composition.
- There were questions whether bhava was in any way related to choreography.
- Classical dance forms depend more on narration, which need bhava.
- For, once the meaning is understood, it becomes that much more easy to render the krithis with the correct 'bhava'.
- What fills your soul, then, is shaantam - the last of the nine bhavas.
- In an emotion-filled delivery, she recreates all the "rasas" and "bhavas".
- She tries to explain the difference between abhinaya and bhava and rasa in the present volume.
- In other words, where there is bhava, there is birth.
- The Navarasa number was, for instance, superb in that it gave them a wonderful opportunity to use their countenance dexterously to convey the nine bhavas or rasas.
- The flow between his movements was so smooth, like an unbroken chain, that the flow of bhava was also unbroken.
- There was not much scope for bhava in productions like "Bhukamp" or "Sarpagati".
- Shree is a difficult raga, she points out, adding that it suits a difficult bhava.
- The theory posits that the bhavas are dormant in humans.
Origin Hindi bhāv 'emotion, feeling', from Sanskrit bhāvā 'manner of acting, behaviour'. |