Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Angkor' has mentioned 'Sanskrit' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
capital city), also known as Yasodharapura (Khmer: xe1x9ex99xe1x9ex9fxe1x9fx84xe1x9ex92xe1x9ex9axe1x9ex94xe1x9exbbxe1x9ex9axe1x9fx88; Sanskrit: xe0xa4xafxe0xa4xb6xe0xa5x8bxe0xa4xa7xe0xa4xb0xe0xa4xaaxe0xa5x81xe0xa4xb0)[1][2] was the capital city of the Khmer Empire.
The word Angkor is derived from the Sanskrit nagara (xe0xa4xa8xe0xa4x97xe0xa4xb0), meaning "city".
Temples from the period of Chenla bear stone inscriptions, in both Sanskrit and Khmer, naming both Hindu and local ancestral deities, with Shiva supreme among the former.
It is a corrupted form of nokor which derives from the Sanskrit nagara.
Gopura is a Sanskrit term (xe0xa4x97xe0xa5x8bxe0xa4xaaxe0xa5x81xe0xa4xb0) meaning "entrance pavilion" or "gateway".
Jaya (xe1x9ex87xe1x9ex99 ~ xe1x9ex87xe1x9fx90xe1x9ex99) is a prefix derived from Sanskrit meaning "victory".
Prasat (xe1x9ex94xe1x9fx92xe1x9ex9axe1x9exb6xe1x9ex9fxe1x9exb6xe1x9ex91) is a Khmer term derived from Sanskrit prxc4x81sxc4x81da and usually meaning "monument" or "palace" and, by extension, "ancient temple".
Derived from Sanskrit vara.
Derived from Sanskrit strxc4xab (xe1x9ex9fxe1x9fx92xe1x9ex9axe1x9fx92xe1x9ex8fxe1x9exb8) it means "woman", derived from Sanskrit sirxc4xab (xe1x9ex9fxe1x9exb7xe1x9ex9axe1x9exb8) it means "beauty", "splendor" or "glory".
Varman (xe1x9ex9cxe1x9ex9axe1x9fx92xe1x9ex98xe1x9fx90xe1x9ex93) is a suffix, from Sanskrit varman, meaning "shield" or "protector".