Critically, panchang practice is not uniform. Regional variations matter: different schools weight tithi versus nakshatra differently; local customs add prohibitions (e.g., certain activities avoided on particular weekdays). And modern life complicates matters further. Globalization and fixed-schedule institutions force negotiations between celestial advice and earthly constraints. A job offer with a firm start date, a foreign visa interview, or an urgent medical procedure may override the luxury of waiting for a favorable muhurta. Here panchang becomes flexible — a cultural script that can be honored partially, renegotiated, or set aside.
Tritiya. This lunar day is generally considered auspicious for starting new projects and social gatherings. 7 april 2000 panchang
| Event | Time (IST – New Delhi) | | :--- | :--- | | | 6:08 AM | | Sunset | 6:45 PM | | Moonrise | 7:55 AM | | Moonset | 9:25 PM | Critically, panchang practice is not uniform
The word "Panchang" is derived from two Sanskrit words: Pancha (Five) and Anga (Limbs). Here are the five limbs for April 7, 2000: Tritiya