Aesthetics

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Yes, guys!!! I know I know. This might sound such a cliched trope of the good girl and the fuck boy. But bear with me because somewhere it is a guilty pleasure for all of us to read at least one cliched story. 

This is an Indian Historical Fiction. Of course, in certain places, the women seem excessively and unusually difficult to relate to. That is the kind of society they lived in. Loyalty is the first quality in the women of that time. Piety and loyalty were two things that men couldn't even touch at the level at which women of that time were. 

I believe that loyalty should be present in both the parties involved in a relationship. One-sided loyalty usually leaves the loyal one in pain and suffering. 

Be patient with my female characters here. Their upbringing and moral values are completely different from ours today. So, just bear with some of their antics.

This story is my property and I have a copyright on them all. Please don't steal someone else's hard work.

Kunwar Veer Bai

Our heroine. Bravery and Rajput are synonymous with each other and can be used interchangeably. Bravery is her first feature and loyalty is her second. Her life has always been within the palace walls. She's usually happy inside there going out into the city to donate to people and meet her people. The eldest of her siblings, she is a role model to them all.

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Prince Ameyajit

The third son of Shatrujit. He takes after his father in his dalliances with women. The playboy prince whose life revolves around battles and enjoyment. He's quite happy with the maximum responsibilities lying on his two elder brothers. He enjoys going on battles and spending time in merrymaking rather than getting into politics or much of administration. 

Pictures were taken from Pinterest, the copyright is with the original owners

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Pictures were taken from Pinterest, the copyright is with the original owners.

Pranayavijita is made of two words in a sandhi. Pranaya and Vijita.

प्रणय (n) love, romance

विजिता (f) Victor

So, whenever a word has a deergha Matra like Shivaa or Ramaa it is a feminine noun. आ  ई  are for feminine attributes. They denote a female.

Hindi allows for a half letter to end a sentence but Sanskrit, Telugu, Kannada, and Tamil (I'm not really aware of the grammar structure of Malayalam, Gujarati, Punjabi, Bengali, and other Indian languages, so not talking about it.) have a rule of not allowing half letters to end the sentence or the word. All the names, masculine, end with a visarga in Sanskrit.

Hence, राम् Ram in Hindi becomes राम Rama in Telugu (doing the transliteration of telugu letter in devanagri) and रामः Ramah in Sanskrit.

But all feminine nouns end with a deergha akshara in all Indian languages.

It is interesting to learn these little grammatical tidbits. But ignore this rant if you're not into it.

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