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Bhaktivedanta VedaBase: Śrīmad Bhāgavatam 5.21.13
yasyaikam cakram dvādaśāram shan-nemi tri-nābhi samvatsarātmakam samāmananti tasyāksho meror mūrdhani krito mānasottare kritetara-bhāgo yatra protam ravi-ratha-cakram taila-yantra-cakravad bhraman mānasottara-girau paribhramati
SYNONYMS
yasya — of which; ekam — one; cakram — wheel; dvādaśa — twelve; aram — spokes; shat — six; nemi — the segments of the rim; tri-nābhi — the three pieces of the hub; samvatsara-ātmakam — whose nature is a samvatsara; samāmananti — they fully describe; tasya — the chariot of the sun-god; akshah — the axle; meroh — of Sumeru Mountain; mūrdhani — on the top; kritah — fixed; mānasottare — on the mountain known as Mānasottara; krita — fixed; itara-bhāgah — the other end; yatra — where; protam — fixed on; ravi-ratha-cakram — the wheel of the chariot of the sun-god; taila-yantra-cakra-vat — like the wheel of an oil-pressing machine; bhramat — moving; mānasottara-girau — on Mānasottara Mountain; paribhramati — turns.
TRANSLATION
The chariot of the sun-god has only one wheel, which is known as Samvatsara. The twelve months are calculated to be its twelve spokes, the six seasons are the sections of its rim, and the three cātur-māsya periods are its three-sectioned hub. One side of the axle carrying the wheel rests upon the summit of Mount Sumeru, and the other rests upon Mānasottara Mountain. Affixed to the outer end of the axle, the wheel continuously rotates on Mānasottara Mountain like the wheel of an oil-pressing machine.
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His Divine Grace A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupāda, Founder Ācārya of the International Society for Krishna Consciousness