Puṣkara-Śapatha Itihāsa (Agastya–Indra Dispute at the Tīrthas) | पुष्कर-शपथ-आख्यानम्
गण्डोवाच वक्त्रैकदेशे गण्डेति धातुमेतं प्रचक्षते । तेनोन्नतेन गण्डेति विद्धि मानलसम्भवे
gaṇḍovāca vaktraikadeśe gaṇḍeti dhātum etaṁ pracakṣate | tenonnatena gaṇḍeti viddhi mānalasambhave ||
Gaṇḍa disse: “A raiz (dhātu) ‘gaṇḍ’ é explicada como designando uma parte do rosto—a bochecha. Portanto, ó tu nascida do Fogo, sabe que, por minha bochecha ser elevada e saliente, as pessoas me chamam ‘Gaṇḍa’.”
विश्वामित्र उवाच
The verse illustrates a traditional Sanskrit method of explaining names through etymology: a person’s epithet can be justified by a word’s root-meaning (here, ‘gaṇḍa’ as ‘cheek’), linking language, bodily description, and identity.
A character named Gaṇḍa explains to a fire-born interlocutor why he is called ‘Gaṇḍa’: the term denotes the cheek, and his cheek is prominent, so the name fits.