Mantra.Tips
ganeshatwelve-namesdwadasa-namabefore-study

Sumukhashchaikadantashcha (Twelve Names of Ganesha)

Sumukhashchaikadantashcha (Twelve Names of Ganesha) in English · English

🕉️ hindu·📿 12× repetitions·🕐 Before beginning any new work — at the start of study, journeys, ventures, ceremonies, or each morning·📜 Ganesha Dwadasanama Stotra (traditional, from Puranic / Smriti devotional literature)
Share:

Meaning

This beloved verse lists the Dwadasa Nama — the twelve sacred names of Lord Ganesha — followed by the promise that whoever recites or hears them at the beginning of any important undertaking will face no obstacles. It expressly names the occasions: starting one's studies, a marriage, entering or leaving a place, going into battle, and any moment of crisis. It is therefore the classic 'auspicious beginning' prayer, chanted before exams, journeys, ventures and ceremonies to ensure success free of hindrance.

Origin & Story

Ganesha Dwadasanama Stotra (traditional, from Puranic / Smriti devotional literature) · Traditional (anonymous Puranic verse) · Classical (Puranic devotional tradition)

Lord Ganesha is the Vighnaharta — the remover of obstacles — and is therefore invoked at the very beginning of every auspicious act. This 'Dwadasanama' verse gathers twelve of his most celebrated names into a compact prayer and, crucially, specifies the occasions on which its recitation guarantees an obstacle-free path: education, marriage, entering and leaving, battle and crisis. Because of this explicit promise, the verse became one of the most widely used 'mangala' (auspicious beginning) prayers across Hindu households, recited before students open their books, travellers set out, and families begin any important ceremony.

As told in scripture

Tradition holds that students who recite these twelve names before their lessons and examinations find their path to knowledge cleared of confusion and hindrance, and travellers who chant them before setting out complete their journeys safely — for, as the verse promises, 'for that person no obstacle ever arises.'

Complete Text with Meaning

Tap any line — or the ▶ button — to hear it recited

Verse 1

Sumukhaś caikadantaś ca kapilo gajakarṇakaḥ। Lambodaraś ca vikaṭo vighnanāśo gaṇādhipaḥ॥

Meaning:Sumukha (beautiful-faced), Ekadanta (single-tusked), Kapila (tawny), Gajakarna (elephant-eared), Lambodara (large-bellied), Vikata (immense), Vighnanasha (destroyer of obstacles), Ganadhipa (lord of the ganas), Dhumraketu (smoke-bannered), Ganadhyaksha (chief of the ganas), Bhalachandra (moon-browed), and Gajanana (elephant-faced) — whoever recites or even hears these twelve names of Ganesha at the start of study, at a marriage, while entering or departing, in battle or in any time of crisis — for that person no obstacle ever arises.

Verse 2

Dhūmraketur gaṇādhyakṣo bhālacandro gajānanaḥ। Dvādaśaitāni nāmāni yaḥ paṭhec chṛṇuyād api॥

Verse 3

Vidyārambhe vivāhe ca praveśe nirgame tathā। Saṅgrāme saṅkaṭe caiva vighnas tasya na jāyate॥

Word-by-Word Meaning

Click any word to hear its pronunciation

sumukhaḥ🔊the one with a beautiful (auspicious) face
ekadantaḥ🔊the single-tusked one
kapilaḥ🔊the tawny / reddish-brown coloured one
gajakarṇakaḥ🔊the one with elephant ears
lambodaraḥ🔊the one with a large (pendulous) belly
vikaṭaḥ🔊the immense / extraordinary one
vighnanāśaḥ🔊the destroyer of obstacles
gaṇādhipaḥ🔊the lord of the ganas (Shiva's hosts)
dhūmraketuḥ🔊the one with a smoke-coloured banner
gaṇādhyakṣaḥ🔊the presiding chief of the ganas
bhālacandraḥ🔊the one bearing the moon on his forehead
gajānanaḥ🔊the elephant-faced one
dvādaśa etāni nāmāni🔊these twelve names
yaḥ paṭhet śṛṇuyāt api🔊whoever recites them or even hears them
vidyārambhe🔊at the start of study / education
vivāhe🔊at a marriage
praveśe nirgame🔊while entering and while setting out (departing)
saṅgrāme saṅkaṭe🔊in battle and in times of crisis / difficulty
vighnas tasya na jāyate🔊no obstacle ever arises for that person

Benefits of Chanting Sumukhashchaikadantashcha (Twelve Names of Ganesha)

Removes all obstacles (vighnas) from any new undertaking or important task

Ideal auspicious prayer before studies, exams, journeys, ventures and ceremonies

Invokes Lord Ganesha by his twelve most powerful names (Dwadasa Nama)

Grants success and smooth progress in battle, crisis and difficult situations

Brings the blessings of Ganesha simply by reciting or even hearing the names

Easy to memorise, making it a perfect daily and occasion-based protective prayer

How to Chant Sumukhashchaikadantashcha (Twelve Names of Ganesha)

Repetitions12times
Best TimeBefore beginning any new work — at the start of study, journeys, ventures, ceremonies, or each morning

Recite this verse at the outset of any important undertaking — before opening a book to study, sitting an exam, starting a journey, entering a new place, beginning a venture, or facing a difficult situation. Begin with a remembrance of Ganesha, then chant the twelve names attentively; reciting the full verse three or twelve times is traditional. The verse itself promises that even hearing the names brings the same protection, so it may also be played or recited aloud for the benefit of a gathering before an auspicious event.

Frequently Asked Questions

This page shows the complete Sumukhashchaikadantashcha (Twelve Names of Ganesha) written in the English script — the same Sanskrit/Hindi verses, transliterated character-by-character so you can read and chant comfortably. Tap any line (or the ▶ button) to hear it recited aloud.
Yes — only the script changes; the words and their meaning are the original. The verse-by-verse meaning, benefits and how-to-chant guidance on this page apply exactly the same.
They are Sumukha, Ekadanta, Kapila, Gajakarnaka, Lambodara, Vikata, Vighnanasha, Ganadhipa, Dhumraketu, Ganadhyaksha, Bhalachandra and Gajanana — together known as the Dwadasa Nama (twelve names) of Lord Ganesha.
The verse itself lists the occasions: at the start of study (vidyarambha), at a marriage (vivaha), while entering or departing (pravesha-nirgama), in battle (sangrama) and in any crisis (sankata). It is the ideal prayer before exams, journeys, new ventures and ceremonies to ensure a hindrance-free outcome.
Both honour Ganesha's names, but they are distinct verses. The Sankatanashana stotra lists the names in an ordinal sequence ('Prathamam Vakratundam...'), while this verse names them directly ('Sumukhashchaikadantashcha...') and emphasises the specific life-occasions on which reciting them removes all obstacles.
The verse states 'yah pathet shrinuyad api' — whoever recites them OR even hears them. So both reciting the names yourself and attentively listening to them are said to grant Ganesha's protection from obstacles.

You May Also Like

Found this helpful? Share it with loved ones 🙏

Share:

Read the full Sumukhashchaikadantashcha (Twelve Names of Ganesha) with verse-by-verse meaning, or explore more sacred texts