19364
< Dictionaries | Dan Martin
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
| Tibetan | |
|---|---|
| Tibetan Alternate | |
| Tibetan Definition | |
| Tibetan Source | |
| Wylie | yar ldan |
| Wylie Definition | In contexts of explaining the way the three vows go with each other, it means something like 'possessing [the vows] upwardly/progressively' As Sgam-po-pa uses the term it seems to mean that in cases of conflict between them, the higher vows have predominance, and so there is no fault in thereby neglecting the lower. Later, some seem to believe that the lower vows are 'improved' by the taking of the higher vows. Sobisch, Dissertation. Phadampa uses the term in this passage which tells his ideas about combining the three vows: 'o na nyan thos kyi tshul khrims sna cig la rten 'tshal lam myi 'tshal lam zhus pas / rten na yang bzang thar pa'i skas yin / lar mang po mang po'i nang du nyung ngu nyung ngu 'du ba yin / gsang sngags kyi dam tshig gtsang par bsrung na / 'og ma'i bslab pa ma bsrungs kyang der 'du ba yin / sdom pa gsum la rdzas tha dad pa myed / tha dad du bsrung pa yang yod de / de yang yar ldan yin gsung // //. |
| Wylie Synonym | |
| Sanskrit | |
| English | |
| English Definition | |
| English Synonyms | |
| Chinese | |
| Chinese (Simplified) | |
| Chinese (Traditional) | |
| Chinese Definition | |
| Page Number |