English-Tibetan List from Gateway to Knowledge: Difference between revisions

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==Glossary from Blazing Splendor, The Memoirs of the Dzogchen Yogi Tulku Urgyen Rinpoche==
The numbers refer to Volume and sentence.
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*abra—local type of mouse-hare or prairie dog.<br>
*[[acceptance of future non-origination]] - phyi mi skye ba'i bzod pa [4,28]
*Abum Rinchen Pungpa—Mount Abum; situated eight hours' drive on dirt roads from Sharda in Nangchen.<br>
*[[accompanying basis of mental states, as one of the fivefold basis of knowables]] - 'khor sems byung gi gzhi - def. [3,40]
*accomplishment—realization; signs of accomplishment include clairvoyant abilities, miraculous powers, and the inner heat of tummo.<br>
*[[acquisition, as one of the fourteen no]]n-concurrent formations - thob pa - def. [1,105]
*Achen—prince of Nangchen during the time of Samten Gyatso.<br>
*[[actualization of the path of noble beings]] - 'phags lam mngon byung [1,138]
*Adeu Rinpoche (b.1930)—guru of the Nangchen kings whose monastery, Tsechu, is located next to the former royal palace.<br>
*[[adherence, as one of the five object determining mental states]] - mos pa - def. [1,41] {alt: interest}
*Adzom Drukpa (1842-1924)—Drodul Pawo Dorje; one of the great Dzogchen masters of the early part of the twentieth Century, a tertön and a disciple both of Jamyang Khyentse Wangpo and Paltrul Rinpoche.<br>
*[[affliction]] - kun nyon [1,60]
*all-ground—alaya, a sentient being's basic state of mind; 'expanse of the all-ground' refers to the vastness of basic being.<br>
*[[affliction of karma]] - las kyi kun nas nyon mongs pa - def. [4,37]
*amban—Chinese ambassador in Lhasa.<br>
*[[affliction of rebirth]] - skye ba'i kun nas nyon mongs pa - def. [4,37]
*Amdo—one of the provinces of Kham.<br>
*[[affliction through disturbance]] - nyon mongs pas kun nas nyon mongs - def. [4,37]
*Amnye—region of East Tibet.<br>
*[[aggregate of perceptions]] - 'du shes kyi phung po - def. [1,28]; div. [1,29-30]
*amrita—nectar of immortality; drink of the gods; tantric rituals often use blessed liquor or fruit juice.<br>
*[[aggregate of consciousnesses]] - rnam shes kyi phung po - def. [1,135]; div. [1,136-140]
*Angi Tendar—yogi from Nangchen; disciple of the first Tsoknyi.<br>
*[[aggregate of formations]] - 'du byed kyi phung po - def. [1,31]; div. [1,32]
*Anu or Anu Yoga—second of the three inner tantras corresponding to the eighth of the nine vehicles; emphasizes knowledge (prajna) rather than means (upaya) and the completion stage rather than the development stage. The view of Anu Yoga is that liberation is attained through growing accustomed to the insight into the nondual nature of space and wisdom.<br>
*[[aggregate of forms]] - [2,1]
*Argong—see Ngaktrin of Argong.<br>
*[[aggregate of forms]] - gzugs kyi phung po - def. [1,3], [1,6]; subdiv. [1,3]
*arhats, sixteen—disciples of the Buddha who vowed to preserve the Dharma until the coming of Maitreya, the future awakened one.<br>
*[[aggregate of sensations]] - tshor ba'i phung po - def. [1,24]; div. [1,25-27]
*Armor Against Darkness—Munpey Gocha; commentary on Anu Yoga in more than 1,400 pages by Sangye Yeshe of Nub, according to an original tantra known as the Scripture of the Great Assemblage. The Armor has since been published in Delhi, India, as part of Dudjom Rinpoche's monumental publishing effort to preserve the early teachings of the Nyingma school. It is in volume 50–51 of his Nyingma Kahma edition. <br>
*[[aggregates]] - phung po - list of five [1,1]; def. [1,2]
*Asura or Asura Cave—sacred place where the Lotus-Born master subdued the evil forces of afflicting negative conditions on Nepal through the practice of Vajra Kilaya and manifested the Mahamudra Vidyadhara level. Situated near Pharping in the Kathmandu valley. <br>
*[[aggregates that perpetuate defilements]] - zag bcas nyer len gyi phung po [1,142]
*Ati or Ati Yoga—third of the three inner tantras; emphasizes, according to Jamgön Kongtrul the First, the view that liberation is attained through growing accustomed to insight into the nature of primordial enlightenment, free from accepting and rejecting, hope and fear. The more common word for Ati Yoga nowadays is 'Dzogchen,' the Great Perfection.<br>
*[[aging, as one of the fourteen no]]n-concurrent formations - rga ba - def. [1,116]
*Atisha (982-1054)—great Indian master who visited Tibet; from him springs the Kadampa and then the Gelugpa lineages.<br>
*[[alertness]] - shes bzhin [1,41] (recheck!*)
*Avalokiteshvara—bodhisattva of compassion, often depicted with four arms.<br>
*[[all-ground]] - kun gzhi - def. [1,139]
*Banyak Ating (20th cent.)—governor of Sikkim and benefactor of tulku Urgyen.<br>
*[[all-ground consciousness]] - kun gzhi'i rnam shes [1,138-139]
*[[all-ground consciousness]] - kun gzhi'i rnam shes [4,10]
*[[all-ground consciousness of maturation]] - rnam par smin pa'i kun gzhi'i rnam shes - def. [1,139]
*[[all-ground consciousness, as one of the eight collections of cognitions]] - kun gzhi'i rnam shes - def.

Latest revision as of 16:26, 7 July 2009

The numbers refer to Volume and sentence. This file needs to be re-edited for hyper-links.