Property:english-comment

From Rangjung Yeshe Wiki - Dharma Dictionary
Jump to navigation Jump to search

This is a property of type Text.

Showing 20 pages using this property.
S
compare: [[rtsol ba]], exertion; [[brtson 'grus]], effort  +
(PH) added meanings "unrelated; meaningless" based on example  +
Comment: a big black bird that sweeps down on rabbits or small sheep and carries them away  +
definition of uncaused phenomenon ('dus ma byas pa'i chos)  +
name for the eighth of the ten Bodhisattva grounds (sa, bhUmi); for others see: byang sems 'phags pa'i sa. Acala is a wrathful deity closely associated with Performance Tantra and the VairocanAbhisambodhi Tantra.  +
one of the six divisions of ordinary beings (so so'i skye bo, pRthagjana); for others see: see [[dmyal ba'i rten can gyi so so'i skye bo]]  +
one of the five divisions of sense consciousness (dbang shes); the others are: ear consciousness (rna shes); nose consciousness (sna shes); tongue consciousness (lce shes); body consciousness (lus shes)  +
one of the five divisions of internal matter (nang gi bem po); the others are: ear sense power (rna ba'i dbang po); nose sense power (sna'i dbang po); tongue sense power (lce'i dbang po); body sense power (lus kyi dbang po)  +
see: mig shes\nNot sure what divisions mean?? (T)  +
definition of form-source (gzugs kyi skye mched, rUpAyatana)  +
Comment: Jam-y#ang-shay-b#a holds that "name" (ming) in this the Mind-Only context means a term expressing that object (rang zhes rjod pa'i sgra), and although "terminology" (brda') usually has the same meaning as "name," in order to avoid redundancy he takes it to mean a conceptual consciousness apprehending that object (rang 'dzin rtog pa). (This explanation of "terminology" is well-founded in the tradition since a common dictum is that names and conceptual consciousnesses engage their objects similarly.) (PH) verify change in note  +
Comment: someone who has cognized emptiness directly and thus has risen above the state of a common being.  +
the fourth of the twelve links of dependent arising  +
the fourth of the twelve links of dependent arising  +
Comment: This word often means "abbot," but it also refers to someone versed in a topic.  +
Comment: smra mkhas = vAk-karaNa(MSA).  +
Comment: In the Tibetan medical system, one of the three primary elements promoting health, when balanced, and disease, when imbalanced--the other two being wind (rlung) and phlegm (bad kan). The three are called the three problematics (nyes pa, doza), often mistranslated as "humours," which are necessarily fluids whereas wind is not a fluid.  +
bile; Comment: One of the three problematics (nyes pa; doza), often translated as "humours," but the "humours" are fluids as in the four elemental fluids of the body--blood, phlegm, black bile, and yellow bile. In Buddhist medicine the three problematics, which, when in balance, promote health and, when imbalanced, promote disease, are wind (rlung), bile (mkhris pa), and phlegm (pad kan).  +