"The goddess," Durga, Lord Siva's consort.
mother goddess; supreme power in the universe; wife or embodiment of the female energy of Siva having both beneficent and malevolent forms or aspects
a house wife devoted her full time towards social service and family counseling for those depressed by the hopeless of modern civilization and Mrs
Goddess Parvati (wife of Lord Shiva)
the goddess. Divinity in its female aspect.
Lit. 'goddess'. The word can refer to any female deity in Hinduism.
Mother goddess within Hinduism; widely spread following collapse of Guptas; encouraged new emotionalism in religious ritual. (p. 257)
Hindu Mother Goddess whose major forms are Durga, Parvati, and Kali. In the Vedas, the Goddess was associated with natural phenomena such as dawn, night, and the Ganges River. In the post-Vedic period, Mahadevi (Great Goddess) became the source of energy in the cosmos and the counterpart of Shiva. For Shaktas, she is not a counterpart but the supreme deity herself.
Goddess, the feminine aspect of the Divine.
("she who is shining"): a female deity such as Parvati, Lakshmi, or Radha, either in the sense of the ultimate Reality (in its feminine pole) or a high angelic being
Goddess; Deity; a holy creative power
Devi (The Goddess) is a 1960 film by Bengali director Satyajit Ray, starring Soumitra Chatterjee and Sharmila Tagore.
Devi is the fictional character created by Virgin Comics, as part of their debut Shakti line, which focuses on Indian settings.