Geography, asked by Anuspeaks, 1 year ago

quick answer plzzz...!
why full moon is called poornima??​

Answers

Answered by hackerraj2625
1

Answer:

I think this help you

Explanation:

Poornima (also called Poornima, Pournima, Bangla: পূর্ণিমা, Sanskrit: पूर्णिमा (IAST: pūrṇimā)) is the Bangladeshi, Sanskrit and Nepali word for full moon, while in Indonesian it is known as Purnama. The day of Purnima is the day (Tithi) in each month when the full moon occurs, and marks the division in each month between the two lunar fortnights (Paksha).

A full moon occurs when the Sun and the Moon appear separated by 180°. This lunar day is the considered auspicious for new beginnings.[1] The Shukla ("Bright") Paksha is the fortnight before, and the Krishna ("Dark") Paksha is the fortnight after Purnima.

This lunar phase lasts only for a while, when the Sun, Earth, and the Moon are aligned exactly in a straight line, called a syzygy of the Sun–Earth–Moon system. Full moon is considered the third of the four primary phases of the Moon; the other three phases are new moon, first quarter moon, and third quarter moon. The full moon shows 100% illumination, causes high tides, and can concur with lunar eclipses.[2]


hackerraj2625: hi
Anuspeaks: hi
hackerraj2625: you are girl
hackerraj2625: where you from
sianav: orissa
Answered by sianav
0

HEY MATE !!!

GOOD MORNING ✌☺✌☺✌

HERE is Your ANSWER :-

Poornima (also called Poornima, Pournima, Bangla: পূর্ণিমা, Sanskrit: पूर्णिमा Sanskrit and Nepali word for full moon, while in Indonesian it is known as Purnama. The day of Purnima is the day (Tithi) in each month when the full moon occurs, and marks the division in each month between the two lunar fortnights (Paksha).

A full moon occurs when the Sun and the Moon appear separated by 180°. This lunar day is the considered auspicious for new beginnings. The Shukla ("Bright") Paksha is the fortnight before, and the Krishna ("Dark") Paksha is the fortnight after Purnima.

This lunar phase lasts only for a while, when the Sun, Earth, and the Moon are aligned exactly in a straight line, called a syzygy of the Sun–Earth–Moon system. Full moon is considered the third of the four primary phases of the Moon; the other three phases are new moon, first quarter moon, and third quarter moon. The full moon shows 100% illumination, causes high tides, and can concur with lunar eclipses..............

hope it helps !


sianav: thanks!
Similar questions