Pa > References for ‘paisa’
See also: paints · pair · páirabo · páirabu · pairs · paise · páite · páiyá
[3] As vipras are to some extent guided [...] will not easily let go of even a paisa.
[3] One day Khyát́andás [...] merchant, in his shop, and put one paisa in his pocket. “Please give me one paisa worth of myrobalan,” he [...] everything was very cheap. With one paisa you could buy twenty myrobalan seeds.
[65] “Give me just one paisa as a sacerdotal fee,” said [...] The sweet seller threw down a one paisa coin. Khyát́andás [...] going to Páchundi village.
[10] Perhaps you know that there are [...] leaves and one rupee twenty-five paisa as a sacerdotal fee.
[12] A horrible feasts menu leaves [...] leaf and a sacerdotal fee of five paisa.
[13] The jackals were served the excellent [...] fee of one rupee and twenty-five paisa. They expected her to say, “Gentlemen, [...] fee of one rupee and twenty-five paisa in return for the effort you made [...] obliging me in this way.”
[17] The story goes [in the Mahábhárata] [...] other hand, who keeps even one paisa with oneself, fails to get that help.
[8] At any rate, when the Europeans [...] mostly from Orissa. The fare was one paisa per mile. [...] horse-drawn carriages could travel.
[72] Poppy seeds can be cultivated with [...] buying three paise of rice, one paisa of oil, salt and spices, and one paisa of poppy seeds. The people of [...] from the Sanskrit word ahiphena.
[7] In both social and economic life [...] kilos of brinjal were sold for one paisa, and forty kilos were sold for [...] salary cuts of ten percent or more.
[13] Biija means “seed”. [...] not kept in hand even a single paisa of it, is alone dagdhabiija. All [...] indirectly. You should remember this.
[17] [[Finally, for the proper utilization of the nations revenue and to ensure that every paisa is spent on building up the nation, [...] of the party holding a majority.
[1] Perhaps youve heard stories [...] buy a kilo of fried okra for two paisa and a kilo of fried vegetables for one paisa. The king of Andherinagari was called Choapat́.
[48] Then the younger brother called [...] only had to give the boatman one paisa. So this laghimá-siddhi [...] years to get is worth just one paisa.”