History, asked by zoya9145, 1 month ago

hello
answer me truthfully
sub history class 7

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Answered by 0RudrakshMishraa0
1

Explanation:

1: Any stranger who did not belong to a certain society or culture and was not a part of that particular village was regarded as a foreigner.

2:The term 'bhakti' implies 'devotion'. It is the idea of worship or devotion to a particular deity or any other form of God, i.e. avatar.

Answered by arohirawat4u
1

Answer:

A "foreigner" was any stranger who showed up say in a given town, somebody who was not a piece of that society or culture. (In Hindi the term pardesi may be utilized to depict such an individual and in Persian, ajnabi.) A city-tenant, thusly, might have viewed a woodland occupant as a "foreigner

Bhakti, which comes to mean “devotion” or “love” in later literature, is one of the central concepts of Hinduism. It describes that side of Indian religion in which the personal engagement of a devotee with a personally conceived divinity is understood to be the core of the religious life.

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