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|label6 = Date of first publication:
|label6 = Date of first publication:
|data6 = January 3, 2021
|data6 = January 3, 2021
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|label7 = DOI
|label7 = DOI
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|data7 =
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|data7 = [https://doi.org/10.47468/CSNE.2021.e01.s09.037 10.47468/CSNE.2021.e01.s09.037]
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}}
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== Etymology and derivation: ==
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== Etymology and derivation ==
<div style="text-align:justify;">
<div style="text-align:justify;">
The word mala is derived from the Sanskrit root “Mruj” meaning “that which is to be cleaned or eliminated”.<ref>Jha Srujan. Amarakosha online application</ref> The word means excretions of the body, dirt, sin, natural impurity etc.<ref>Monier Williams A Sanskrit–English Dictionary,new edition, Oxford: At the Clarendon Press, OCLC 458052227, page 135-136.</ref>
The word mala is derived from the Sanskrit root “Mruj” meaning “that which is to be cleaned or eliminated”.<ref>Jha Srujan. Amarakosha online application</ref> The word means excretions of the body, dirt, sin, natural impurity etc.<ref>Monier Williams A Sanskrit–English Dictionary,new edition, Oxford: At the Clarendon Press, OCLC 458052227, page 135-136.</ref>