The Exposition of Nṛsiṁha Worship-Mantras, Nyāsa, Mudrās, Yantras, Kavaca, and Nṛsiṁha Gāyatrī
अजेयाव्यय अव्यक्त ब्रह्माण्डोदर इत्यपि । ततो ब्रह्मसहस्रान्ते कोटिस्रग्रुण्डशब्दतः ॥ १८९ ॥
ajeyāvyaya avyakta brahmāṇḍodara ityapi | tato brahmasahasrānte koṭisragruṇḍaśabdataḥ || 189 ||
তিনি ‘অজেয়’, ‘অব্যয়’, ‘অব্যক্ত’ এবং ‘ব্রহ্মাণ্ডোদর’ নামেও কীর্তিত। তারপর সহস্র ব্রহ্মা-চক্রের অন্তে ‘কোটি-স্রগ্রুণ্ড’ নামে এক ধ্বনি উদ্ভূত হয়।
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada in a Vedāṅga/śabda-oriented context)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It presents transcendent epithets—invincible, imperishable, unmanifest—pointing to the Supreme beyond form, while linking cosmic time (thousand Brahmā-cycles) with a technical notion of śabda (sacred sound) that marks a major cosmological transition.
By emphasizing the Lord as avyakta (beyond visible form), it supports devotion that is grounded in remembrance of divine attributes and in reverence for sacred sound/mantra, not merely in external appearances.
The verse uses śabda-based technical naming (a hallmark of Vyākaraṇa/Śikṣā-style discourse), showing how precise terminology and sound-concepts are employed to describe cosmology and divine attributes in Narada Purana’s Vedāṅga-oriented sections.