bying bying thu lu: Difference between revisions

From Rangjung Yeshe Wiki - Dharma Dictionary
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m (Bot: Adding <noinclude>{{TermAdmin}}{{Term}}</noinclude>)
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
<noinclude>{{TermAdmin}}{{Term}}</noinclude>
<noinclude>{{TermAdmin}}{{Term}}</noinclude>
<wytotib>{{PAGENAME}}</wytotib><br>
<wytotib>{{PAGENAME}}</wytotib><br>
species of small beetle [JV]
species of small beetle [JV]  
 
(med) Beetle, Dungbeetle, Coridius chinensis (Drungtso 1999, Czaja 2019). <br>
Food Use: "Coridius chinensis (Dallas) is eaten by one or more Assamese tribes." (Hoffmann, 1947)
Medicinal Use: "This species is very commonly used in China in an aphrodisiacal medicine and is on sale in Chinese medicine shops throughout China.  It is called 'Chu Shan Chung' or 'Hai Tao Chung' and was written about in 1590 by Li Shih chen and in 1890 by Fang Shui." (Hoffmann, 1947) [[User:Johannes Schmidt|Johannes Schmidt]] ([[User talk:Johannes Schmidt|talk]]) 21:14, 27 November 2021 (UTC)


  [[Category:Tibetan Dictionary]] [[Category:rydic2003]] [[Category:ba]]
  [[Category:Tibetan Dictionary]] [[Category:rydic2003]] [[Category:ba]]

Revision as of 16:14, 27 November 2021

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).

Or go directly to http://rywiki.tsadra.org/ for more upcoming features.

བྱིང་བྱིང་ཐུ་ལུ
species of small beetle [JV]

(med) Beetle, Dungbeetle, Coridius chinensis (Drungtso 1999, Czaja 2019).
Food Use: "Coridius chinensis (Dallas) is eaten by one or more Assamese tribes." (Hoffmann, 1947) Medicinal Use: "This species is very commonly used in China in an aphrodisiacal medicine and is on sale in Chinese medicine shops throughout China. It is called 'Chu Shan Chung' or 'Hai Tao Chung' and was written about in 1590 by Li Shih chen and in 1890 by Fang Shui." (Hoffmann, 1947) Johannes Schmidt (talk) 21:14, 27 November 2021 (UTC)