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In verses 2 and 3 of the Sahasranama she is described as a Udayatbhanu Sahasrabha (the one who is as bright as the rays of thousand rising suns), Chaturbahu Samanvita (the one who has four hands) and Ragasvarupa Pashadhya (the one who is the embodiment of love and the who is holding the rope). Lalita Sahasranama begins by calling the goddess Shri Mata (Revered Mother), Shri Maharajni (Revered Empress) and Shrimat Simhasaneshwari (The goddess in the most revered throne). The Lalita Sahasranama does not use any such auxiliary conjunctions and is unique in being an enumeration of holy names that meets the metrical, poetical and mystic requirements of a sahasranama by their order throughout the text. Further, in order to maintain the meter, sahasranamas use the artifice of adding words like tu, api, ca, and hi, which are conjunctions that do not necessarily add to the meaning of the name except in cases of interpretation. It is the only sahasranama that does not repeat a single name. The names are organized as hymns (stotras). Lalita Sahasranamam contains the thousand names of the Hindu mother goddess Lalita. Lalitha is the Goddess of bliss, an epithet for Shiva's wife, Goddess Parvati. It is a sacred text to the Hindu worshippers of Goddess Lalitha Devi. The names are organized a Lalitha Sahasranamam is a text from Brahmanda Purana and it contains a thousand names of the Hindu Goddess Lalitha. Lalitha Sahasranamam is a text from Brahmanda Purana and it contains a thousand names of the Hindu Goddess Lalitha.