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( | ('''[[sman]]''') Brass (Drungtso 1999) Aurichalcite (dGa' ba'i rdo rje 1995) <br> | ||
Synonyms : dri med, rtsibs brtsegs, bzu bya, ri ri k+'a, gser can (dGa' ba'i rdo rje 1995) <br> | |||
Sanskrit : rīti (Dash 1989) <br> | Sanskrit : rīti (Dash 1989) <br> | ||
''''khar ba ra gan g.ya'''' yis mig nad sel /... / '''ra gan''' ni / rgya rag bod rag so so la / '''pho rag''' skya bo dang / '''mo rag''' ljang ser gnyis re yod kyang / skabs 'dir '''bod rag''' gis chog ste / de yang ti tsha dkar po la zangs sum skor bsres pa'i mo rag ljang ser dang / zangs bzhus par rag rdo tshod kyis btab pa'i pho rag skya bo gnyis so sor 'byung ba / bzhu dus kyi dud pa la snod gzhan bub par chags pa'i skya bo de dang brdar ba'i 'dul phyes mig la phan / snga ma ltar byas pa'i g.ya' byugs pas shu 'bras la phan pa'o // (Shel gong shel phreng, pdf p 111.3) <br> | ''''khar ba ra gan g.ya'''' yis mig nad sel /... / '''ra gan''' ni / rgya rag bod rag so so la / '''pho rag''' skya bo dang / '''mo rag''' ljang ser gnyis re yod kyang / skabs 'dir '''bod rag''' gis chog ste / de yang ti tsha dkar po la zangs sum skor bsres pa'i mo rag ljang ser dang / zangs bzhus par rag rdo tshod kyis btab pa'i pho rag skya bo gnyis so sor 'byung ba / bzhu dus kyi dud pa la snod gzhan bub par chags pa'i skya bo de dang brdar ba'i 'dul phyes mig la phan / snga ma ltar byas pa'i g.ya' byugs pas shu 'bras la phan pa'o // (Shel gong shel phreng, pdf p 111.3) <br> | ||
The Shel gong mentiones indian (or chinese ?) as well as tibetan brass, each having a male and female type. | The Shel gong mentiones indian (or chinese?) as well as tibetan brass, each having a whitish male (pho rag) and a green-yellow female type (mo rag), determined by the copper-tin proportions. According to dGa' ba'i rdo rje (1995), pho rag consists of copper and tin in equal parts, mo rag contains 1 part of tin and 3 parts of copper. At the end of the notice of zinc, '''[[ti tsha]]''', he mentions the 'brass ore', rag rdo, of the Shel gong shel phreng, but qualifies it as a kind of zinc ore. <br> | ||
Bronze, '''[['khar ba]]''' (alloy of copper, '''[[zangs]]''', and tin, '''[[gsha' dkar]]'''), and brass, '''rag'''/'''[[ra gan]]''', '''[['khro]]''' and '''[[li]]''' (alloy of copper, '''[[zangs]]''', and zinc, '''[[ti tsha]]''') have a similar use, and both are called bell-metal. <br> | Bronze, '''[['khar ba]]''' (alloy of copper, '''[[zangs]]''', and tin, '''[[gsha' dkar]]'''), and brass, '''rag'''/'''[[ra gan]]''', '''[['khro]]''' and '''[[li]]''' (alloy of copper, '''[[zangs]]''', and zinc, '''[[ti tsha]]''') have a similar use, and both are called bell-metal. <br> | ||
Aurichalcite, yellow copper or brass, is named after Aurichalcum (Latinized version of the Greek "mountain copper") in allusion to its copper and zinc content, the constituents of brass. A secondary mineral in copper and zinc deposits, aurichalcite is typically found as blue or green crusts or mats of tiny, often feathery, tufted crystals (mindat.org). <br> | ''Aurichalcite'' (Zn,Cu)<sub>5</sub>(CO<sub>3</sub>)<sub>2</sub>(OH)<sub>6</sub>, with a variable Zn:Cu ratio), yellow copper or brass, is named after Aurichalcum (Latinized version of the Greek "mountain copper") in allusion to its copper and zinc content, the constituents of brass. A secondary mineral in copper and zinc deposits, ''aurichalcite'' is typically found as blue or green crusts or mats of tiny, often feathery, tufted crystals (mindat.org). <br> | ||
The indian name rīti can denote pale brass, iron rust or score of any metal upon exposure to heat and air (widomlib.org) <br> | The indian name ''rīti'' can denote pale brass, iron rust or score of any metal upon exposure to heat and air (widomlib.org) <br> | ||
[[User:Johannes Schmidt|Johannes Schmidt]] ([[User talk:Johannes Schmidt|talk]]) 13:51, 25 April 2024 (EDT) | [[User:Johannes Schmidt|Johannes Schmidt]] ([[User talk:Johannes Schmidt|talk]]) 13:51, 25 April 2024 (EDT) | ||
[[Category:Tibetan Dictionary]] [[Category:rydic2003]] [[Category:ra]] | [[Category:Tibetan Dictionary]] [[Category:rydic2003]] [[Category:ra]] | ||
Latest revision as of 08:31, 5 October 2025
This is the RYI Dictionary content as presented on the site http://rywiki.tsadra.org/, which is being changed fundamentally and will become hard to use within the GoldenDict application. If you are using GoldenDict, please either download and import the rydic2003 file from DigitalTibetan (WayBack Machine version as the site was shut down in November 2021).
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ར་གན
brass [RY]
1) brass[syn: dri med dang, rtsibs brtsegs, bzhu bya, ri ri k'a, gser can]; 2) precious substance [nang gses su pho rag skya bo dang, mo rag ljang ser gnyis mchis, nus pas mig nad sel, shu ba dang, 'bras nad 'joms] [IW]
1) brass; 2) precious substance [IW]
brass [JV]
(sman) Brass (Drungtso 1999) Aurichalcite (dGa' ba'i rdo rje 1995)
Synonyms : dri med, rtsibs brtsegs, bzu bya, ri ri k+'a, gser can (dGa' ba'i rdo rje 1995)
Sanskrit : rīti (Dash 1989)
'khar ba ra gan g.ya' yis mig nad sel /... / ra gan ni / rgya rag bod rag so so la / pho rag skya bo dang / mo rag ljang ser gnyis re yod kyang / skabs 'dir bod rag gis chog ste / de yang ti tsha dkar po la zangs sum skor bsres pa'i mo rag ljang ser dang / zangs bzhus par rag rdo tshod kyis btab pa'i pho rag skya bo gnyis so sor 'byung ba / bzhu dus kyi dud pa la snod gzhan bub par chags pa'i skya bo de dang brdar ba'i 'dul phyes mig la phan / snga ma ltar byas pa'i g.ya' byugs pas shu 'bras la phan pa'o // (Shel gong shel phreng, pdf p 111.3)
The Shel gong mentiones indian (or chinese?) as well as tibetan brass, each having a whitish male (pho rag) and a green-yellow female type (mo rag), determined by the copper-tin proportions. According to dGa' ba'i rdo rje (1995), pho rag consists of copper and tin in equal parts, mo rag contains 1 part of tin and 3 parts of copper. At the end of the notice of zinc, ti tsha, he mentions the 'brass ore', rag rdo, of the Shel gong shel phreng, but qualifies it as a kind of zinc ore.
Bronze, 'khar ba (alloy of copper, zangs, and tin, gsha' dkar), and brass, rag/ra gan, 'khro and li (alloy of copper, zangs, and zinc, ti tsha) have a similar use, and both are called bell-metal.
Aurichalcite (Zn,Cu)5(CO3)2(OH)6, with a variable Zn:Cu ratio), yellow copper or brass, is named after Aurichalcum (Latinized version of the Greek "mountain copper") in allusion to its copper and zinc content, the constituents of brass. A secondary mineral in copper and zinc deposits, aurichalcite is typically found as blue or green crusts or mats of tiny, often feathery, tufted crystals (mindat.org).
The indian name rīti can denote pale brass, iron rust or score of any metal upon exposure to heat and air (widomlib.org)
Johannes Schmidt (talk) 13:51, 25 April 2024 (EDT)