AJA
AJA or Aja may refer to:Access to Justice Act 1999
Aja people, a group of people living in BeninAja-Gbe language. the language of the Aja people, part of the
Gbe dialect continuum.
Aja language, a language spoken in Sudan
Aja (Hindu mythology)Aja (Yoruba mythology)Aja (album), a 1977 Steely Dan album"Aja", a song on the albumAja Leith
Aja (porn star), Famous
Porn Star Aja (born Barbara Holder)
Alexandre Aja (b. 1978), French filmmaker
American Jewish Archives
American Journal of ArchaeologyAmerican
Judges Association
AJ Auxerre, a French football team
The Australian Journalists' Association, amalgamated in 1992 into the
Media, Entertainment and Arts Alliance
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ajá
interj.
splendid, fine; aha
ajar
v.
muss, rumple
agir
v.
act, behave
Aja
[Mesopotamian] The Babylonian dawn goddess and consort of the sun god.
Aja
Aja (Sanskrit) [from a not + the verbal root jan to be born, produced] Unborn; title given to many of the primordial gods. In the Rig-Veda, the equivalent of the First Logos, which is a radiation or first manifestation on the plane of illusion of the cosmic One -- the Absolute or cosmic paramatman. The Purusha-Sukta or Hymn of Man (RV 10:90) states that the thousand-headed Purusha is dismembered at the foundation of the world so that from his remains the universe might arise. This is the foundation of the later Christian symbol of the sacrificial lamb, for there is here a play on words: Aja the "unborn" -- Purusha or manvantaric spirit -- may also be derived from the verbal root aj (to drive, propel), whose meanings include a he-goat, a ram, and the sign Aries. Spirit disappears -- dies, metaphorically -- the more it becomes involved in cosmic matter, and hence the sacrifice of the unborn, the lamb, or the ram (cf TBL 56).
Aja when derived from the verbal root aj, is also a title given to various Vedic divinities such as Rudra, Indra, Angi, the sun, the maruts, and in post-Vedic works to Brahma, Vishnu, and Siva, as well as to cosmic Kama, counterpart of the Greek cosmic Eros -- all these gods being considered leaders of their respective hierarchies in the sense of urging, driving, or propelling life and intelligence therein.
In its feminine form, aja signifies maya (illusion) and hence prakriti (evolving nature).