saMgrAha
saṃgrāha ( m. ?; the only real Skt. literary occurrences are Mbh. 5.152.17 susaṃgrāhāḥ [so Crit. ed. , for vulgate asaṃ°], under good control , of horses; and one passage in Schmidt, Nachträge , = Griff am Messer ), seizure, over-whelming (and dangerous) grasp (?): LV 374.17 ( vs ) iha rāgamadana-makaraṃ tṛṣṇormijalaṃ kudṛṣṭi-saṃgrāhaṃ saṃsārasāgaram ahaṃ saṃtīrṇo, I have here crossed the ocean of the saṃsāra, whose sea-monsters are passion and love, whose wave-water is thirst, whose overwhelming grasp is heresy (? both control and attachment seem inappropriate here; I have thought of emending to -saṃgāham, depths, profound abyss , but this is not quotable); neg. a-saṃgrāha, non-grasping, not (wrongly) clinging to , Bbh 44.6, 7 asadbhūta-samāropāsaṃgrāha-vivarjito bhūtāpavādāsaṃgrāha-vivarjitaś ( Wogihara, Index , renders by Chinese meaning not wrong holding ).