In > References for ‘indigo’
See also: indication · indications · indicative · indicator · indicators · indicum · indicus · Indies · indifference · indifferent · indifferentiable · indifferently · indigence · indigenous · indigent · indigestible · indigestion · indignant · indignation · indignities · indignity · indii · indiibara · indiivara · indirá · Indirect · indirectly · indiscernible · indiscipline · indisciplined · indiscriminate · indiscriminately · Indispensability · indispensable · indispensably · indisputable · indisputably · indissolubly · indistinct · indistinctly · indistinguishable · Indivara
[59] He Himself is colourless. He has, [...] seven component colours: violent, indigo, blue, green, yellow, orange and [...] Horses” of the Puráńas.
27 occurrences
[6] Avarńa. Varńa [...] – VIBGYOR, i.e., violet, indigo, blue, green, yellow, orange and [...] you are also aware of its colour.
[30] [In one sense,] materialists are [...] into seven colours – violet, indigo, blue, green, yellow, orange and [...] combination of all colours is white.
[14] Education materials such as paper [...] from synthetic processes or from indigo.
[24] There are so many celestial bodies, [...] spectrum (VIBGYOR – violet, indigo, blue, green, yellow, orange and [...] sun. Each has an acoustic root.
[21] The second meaning of kut́hi [...] niilakut́hi [large indigo factory], reshamkut́hi [...] should be kut́hi.
[144] The other essential materials for [...] blue vitriol, ferrum sulphate and indigo. Through synthetic processes, all kinds of colour inks can be made.
[16] After completely destroying the [...] the Bengali peasants to cultivate indigo in their paddy lands because there [...] market. The problem was that once indigo was planted it took two to three [...] The peasants refused to cultivate indigo instead of paddy, and consequently [...] revolted and the cultivation of indigo stopped.
[17] Along with the cultivation of indigo, the British merchants cast their [...] prescribed amount from the farmers.
[6] Take another example. India used to export indigo and get foreign exchange. When synthetic indigo was invented in West Germany, indigo exports stopped because the international market disappeared. Today indigo plants grow by the roadside in India and nobody bothers to collect them.