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तीन tīn[Prk. ितिःप; S. ऽीिण], adj. Three:—tīn-pāṅć, s.f. lit. 'Three and five'; altercation, contention, dispute, squabble; knavish tricks, arts, dodges:—tīn-pāṅćkarnā, tīn-pāṅćlānā(-se), To dispute or quarrel (with); to try one's tricks (with), practise tricks (upon):—tīn-titālā, s.m. The number three; an odd number:—tīn thān, s.m. The private parts; the penis:—tīn-terah, adj. Three and thirteen (regarded as unlucky numbers); scattered, dispersed, broken; distracted; ruined, destroyed; squandered, dissipated, wasted;—tīn-terah karnā, v.t. To scatter, disperse, etc.:—tīntīn, tīn-tīn karke, adv. Three each; three at a time, by threes, in threes:—tīn ḥarf, s.m. 'The three (original) letters of la`nat`; (hence) imprecation, abuse, scorn, censure;—tīn ḥarf bhejnā, v.n. To abuse,curse, etc.:—tīn-raqmīqānūn, s.m. The rule of three (in Arith.):—tīn kāl, s.m. The past, the present, and the future; morning, noon, and evening (=tri-kāl):—tīn kāṅṛe, tīn kāne, s.m. Three aces, a throw of three with three dice, a tres:—tīn-konī, adj. Three-cornered, triangular (=tikon):—tīn-guṇ, s.m.=tīnoṅ-guṇ, q.v.:—tīnoṅ, adj. The three, all three;—s.m.=tīn-thān, q.v.:—tīnoṅavasthā, s.f. The three periods of human life, viz. childhood, manhood, and old age:—tīnoṅbhavan, s.m. The three worlds, etc.=tri-lok, q.v.:—tīnoṅdaśā, s.f.=tīnoṅavasthā:—tīnoṅdukh, s.m. The three kinds of trouble or suffering, viz. Daitikor that occasioned by the body;Bhavatikor that which arises from existence or contact with the world; and Daivikor that which comes from Providence (as calamity, etc.):—tīnoṅde`otā, s.m. The Three persons of the Hindūtriad, viz. Brahmā, Vishnu, and Śiva:—tīnoṇr̤in, s.m. The three kinds of human obligations, i.e. devarṇor the obligations of a worshipper to deity; pitr̤ir̤inor the obligation of ancestors to posterity; and r̤ishi-r̤inor the obligation owing to the r̤ishis:—tīnoṅkāl, s.m.=tīn kālandtri-kāl, qq.v.:—tīnoṅguṇ, s.m. The three qualities or constituents of nature and every existing thing (viz. sattva, rajas, and tamas, see triguṇand guṇ):—tīnoṅlok, s.m.=tīnoṅbhavan, and tri-lok, q.v.
Origin: Hindi