तथैवासं त्रिककुदो वाराहं रूपमास्थित: । त्रिककुत् तेन विख्यात: शरीरस्य तु मापनात्
tathaivāsaṃ trikakudo vārāhaṃ rūpam āsthitaḥ | trikakut tena vikhyātaḥ śarīrasya tu māpanāt ||
Ebenso nahm ich die Gestalt Varāhas, des Ebers, an und trug drei weithin sichtbare Höcker. Wegen dieser drei Erhebungen—als am Leib messbare Merkmale—wurde ich unter dem Namen «Trikakut» berühmt.
तामिन्द्र उवाच गच्छ नहुषस्त्वया वाच्योथ<पूर्वेण मामृषियुक्तेन यानेन त्वमधिरूढ
The verse illustrates how names and reputations (vikhyāti) can arise from observable qualities and deeds—here, a distinctive bodily feature in a chosen form—highlighting the Mahābhārata’s recurring idea that identity is often defined by conduct and manifest attributes rather than mere lineage or claim.
The speaker recounts a past transformation into a boar form characterized by three raised humps/peaks, explaining that this physical trait became the basis for the epithet ‘Trikakut,’ an etiological note on how the name originated.