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<12Characters | Pronunciation Romanization |
Simple Dictionary Definition |
阿陀那 see styles |
ā tuó nà a1 tuo2 na4 a t`o na a to na adana |
ādāna, intp. by 執持 holding on to, maintaining; holding together the karma, good or evil, maintaining the sentient organism, or the germ in the seed or plant. It is another name for the ālaya-vijñāna, and is known as the 阿陀那識 ādānavijñāna. |
ヴァナー see styles |
anaa / ana ヴァナー |
(personal name) Vanner |
七識十名 七识十名 see styles |
qī shì shí míng qi1 shi4 shi2 ming2 ch`i shih shih ming chi shih shih ming shichishiki jūmyō |
The ten names of the seventh vijñāna, v. manas 未那識. |
不思議智 不思议智 see styles |
bù sī yì zhì bu4 si1 yi4 zhi4 pu ssu i chih fushigi chi |
acintya-jñāna, inconceivable wisdom, the indescribable Buddha-wisdom. |
五分法身 see styles |
wǔ fēn fǎ shēn wu3 fen1 fa3 shen1 wu fen fa shen gobun hosshin |
pañca-dharmakāya, the five attributes of the dharmakāya or 'spiritual' body of the Tathāgata, i. e. 戒 that he is above all moral conditions; 定 tranquil and apart from all false ideas; 慧 wise and omniscient; 解脫 free, unlimited, unconditioned, which is the state of nirvana; 解脫知見 that he has perfect knowledge of this state. These five attributes surpass all conditions of form, or the five skandhas; Eitel interprets this by exemption from all materiality (rūpa); all sensations (vedana); all consciousness (saṃjñā); all moral activity (karman); all knowledge (vijñāna). The esoteric sect has its own group. See also 五種法身. |
八十一法 see styles |
bā shí yī fǎ ba1 shi2 yi1 fa3 pa shih i fa hachijūippō |
The eighty-one divisions in the Prajñā-pāramitā sūtra 大般若經 comprising form 色; mind 心; the five skandhas 五陰; twelve means of sensation 入; eighteen realms 界; four axioms 諦; twelve nidānas因緣; eighteen śūnya 空; six pāramitā 度, and four jñāna 智. Also 八十一科. |
分別事識 分别事识 see styles |
fēn bié shì shì fen1 bie2 shi4 shi4 fen pieh shih shih funbetsu jishiki |
The third of the three kinds of perception 識, i. e. real (or abstract), manifest, and reasoned (or inferred); it includes all the eight 識 except the ālayavijñāna. |
初刹那識 初刹那识 see styles |
chū chàn à shì chu1 chan4 a4 shi4 ch`u ch`an a shih chu chan a shih sho setsuna shiki |
The initial kṣaṇa, initial consciousness, i. e. the eighth or ālaya-vijñāna, from which arises consciousness. |
十二因緣 十二因缘 see styles |
shí èr yīn yuán shi2 er4 yin1 yuan2 shih erh yin yüan jūni innen |
Dvādaśaṅga pratītyasamutpāda; the twelve nidānas; v. 尼 and 因; also 十二緣起; 因緣有支; 因緣率連; 因緣棘園; 因緣輪; 因緣重城; 因緣觀; 支佛觀. They are the twelve links in the chain of existence: (1) 無明avidyā, ignorance, or unenlightenment; (2) 行 saṃskāra, action, activity, conception, "dispositions," Keith; (3) 識 vijñāna, consciousness; (4) 名色 nāmarūpa, name and form; (5) 六入 ṣaḍāyatana, the six sense organs, i.e. eye, ear, nose, tongue, body, and mind; (6) 觸 sparśa, contact, touch; (7) 受 vedanā, sensation, feeling; (8) 愛 tṛṣṇā, thirst, desire, craving; (9) 取 upādāna, laying hold of, grasping; (10) 有 bhava, being, existing; (11) 生 jāti, birth; (12) 老死 jarāmaraṇa, old age, death. The "classical formula" reads "By reason of ignorance dispositions; by reason of dispositions consciousness", etc. A further application of the twelve nidānas is made in regard to their causaton of rebirth: (1) ignorance, as inherited passion from the beginningless past ; (2) karma, good and evil, of past lives; (3) conception as a form of perception; (4) nāmarūpa, or body and mind evolving (in the womb); (5) the six organs on the verge of birth; (6) childhood whose intelligence is limited to sparśa, contact or touch; (7) receptivity or budding intelligence and discrimination from 6 or 7 years; (8) thirst, desire, or love, age of puberty; (9) the urge of sensuous existence; (10) forming the substance, bhava, of future karma; (11) the completed karma ready for rebirth; (12) old age and death. The two first are associated with the previous life, the other ten with the present. The theory is equally applicable to all realms of reincarnation. The twelve links are also represented in a chart, at the centre of which are the serpent (anger), boar (ignorance, or stupidity), and dove (lust) representing the fundamental sins. Each catches the other by the tail, typifying the train of sins producing the wheel of life. In another circle the twelve links are represented as follows: (1) ignorance, a blind woman; (2) action, a potter at work, or man gathering fruit; (3) consciousness, a restless monkey; (4) name and form, a boat; (5) sense organs, a house; (6) contact, a man and woman sitting together; (7) sensation, a man pierced by an arrow; (8) desire, a man drinking wine; (9) craving, a couple in union; (10) existence through childbirth; (11) birth, a man carrying a corpse; (12) disease, old age, death, an old woman leaning on a stick. v. 十二因緣論 Pratītya-samutpāda śāstra. |
十波羅蜜 十波罗蜜 see styles |
shí bō luó mì shi2 bo1 luo2 mi4 shih po lo mi jū haramitsu |
(or 密多) The ten are the six pārāmitas with four added. The six are charity (or almsgiving), purity (or morality), patience, zealous progress, meditation, wisdom; i.e. 施, 戒, 忍, 辱, 精進, 禪, 慧. The four additions are 方便; 願; 力 and 智 upāya, adaptability (or, teaching as suited to the occasion and hearer): praṇidhāna, vows; bala, force of purpose; and jñāna, knowledge. Also 十度. |
取想行識 see styles |
qǔ xiǎng xíng shí qu3 xiang3 xing2 shi2 ch`ü hsiang hsing shih chü hsiang hsing shih |
The four immaterial skandhas— vedanā, saṃjñā, saṃskāra, vijñāna, i. e. feeling, ideation, reaction, consciousness. |
天名地鎮 see styles |
anaichi あないち |
(See 神代文字) Ana'ichi (script) |
平等性智 see styles |
píng děng xìng zhì ping2 deng3 xing4 zhi4 p`ing teng hsing chih ping teng hsing chih byōdō shō chi |
samatājñāna. The wisdom of rising above such distinctions as I and Thou, meum and tūm, thus being rid of the ego idea, and wisdom in regard to all things equally and universally, cf. 五智. The esoteric school also call it the 灌頂智 and Ratnasaṃbhava wisdom. |
眞妄二心 see styles |
zhēn wàng èr xīn zhen1 wang4 er4 xin1 chen wang erh hsin shinmō nishin |
The true and false minds i.e. (1) The true bhūtatathatā mind, defined as the ninth or amalavijñāna. (2) The false or illusion mind as represented by the eight vijñānas, 八識. |
穴吊穴釣 see styles |
anatsurushi あなつるし |
(person) Ana Tsurushi |
第二能變 第二能变 see styles |
dì èr néng biàn di4 er4 neng2 bian4 ti erh neng pien daini nōhen |
The second power of change, the kliṣṭamano-vijñāna, disturbed-mind, consciousness, or self-consciousness which gives form to the universe. The first power of change is the ālaya-vijñāna. |
自證聖智 自证圣智 see styles |
zì zhèng shèng zhì zi4 zheng4 sheng4 zhi4 tzu cheng sheng chih jishō shōchi |
pratyātmāryajñāna, personal apprehension of Buddha-truth. |
般遮子旬 see styles |
pán zhē zǐ xún pan2 zhe1 zi3 xun2 p`an che tzu hsün pan che tzu hsün hansha shijun |
pāñcika. Described as the gods of music, i.e. the gandharvas, also as 般遮旬 pañcābhijñāna, the five supernatural powers. |
識宿命通 识宿命通 see styles |
shì sù mìng tōng shi4 su4 ming4 tong1 shih su ming t`ung shih su ming tung shiki shukumyō tsū |
pūrva-nivāsānusmṛti-jñāna; knowledge of all forms of previous existence of oneself and others. |
身如意通 see styles |
shēn rú yì tōng shen1 ru2 yi4 tong1 shen ju i t`ung shen ju i tung shin nyoitsū |
ṛddhividhi-jñāna. Also 身通, 身足通; the power to transfer oneself to various regions at will, also to change the body at will. |
阿賴耶識 阿赖耶识 see styles |
ā lài yé shì a1 lai4 ye2 shi4 a lai yeh shih araya shiki |
ālaya-vijñāna. 'The receptacle intellect or consciousness;' 'the orginating or receptacle intelligence;' 'basic consciousness' (Keith). It is the store or totality of consciousness, both absolute and relative, impersonal in the whole, temporally personal or individual in its separated parts, always reproductive. It is described as 有情根本之心識 the fundamental mind-consciousness of conscious beings, which lays hold of all the experiences of the individual life: and which as storehouse holds the germs 種子 of all affairs; it is at the root of all experience, of the skandhas, and of all things on which sentient beings depend for existence. Mind is another term for it, as it both stores and gives rise to all seeds of phenomena and knowledge. It is called 本識 original mind, because it is the root of all things; 無沒識 inexhaustible mind, because none of its seeds (or products) is lost; 現識 manifested mind, because all things are revealed in or by it; 種子識 seeds mind, because from it spring all individualities, or particulars; 所知依識 because it is the basis of all knowledge; 異熟識 because it produces the rounds of morality, good and evil karma, etc.; 執持識 or 阿陀那 q.v., that which holds together, or is the seed of another rebirh, or phenomena, the causal nexus; 第一識 the prime or supreme mind or consciousness; 宅識 abode (of) consciousness; 無垢識 unsullied consciousness when considered in the absolute, i.e. the Tathāgata; and 第八識, as the last of the eight vijñānas. There has been much discussion as to the meaning and implications of the ālaya-vijñāna. It may also be termed the unconscious, or unconscious absolute, out of whose ignorance or unconsciousness rises all consciousness. |
阿那波那 see styles |
ān à bō nà an1 a4 bo1 na4 an a po na anahana |
(阿那阿波那); 安般; 安那般那(or 阿那般那) ānāpāna, breathing, especially controlled breathing; āna is intp. as exhaling and apāna as inhaling, which is the opposite of the correct meaning; the process is for calming body and mind for contemplation by counting the breathing. |
サンタアナ see styles |
santaana / santana サンタアナ |
(place-name) Santa Ana (El Salvador); Anna |
凡夫十重妄 see styles |
fán fū shí zhòng wàng fan2 fu1 shi2 zhong4 wang4 fan fu shih chung wang bonbu jū jūmō |
The serious misfortunes of the sinful man in whom the Ālaya-vijñāna, the fundamental intelligence, or life force, of everyman, is still unenlightened; they are compared to ten progressive stages of a dream in which a rich man sees himself become poor and in prison. |
阿賴耶外道 阿赖耶外道 see styles |
ā lài yé wài dào a1 lai4 ye2 wai4 dao4 a lai yeh wai tao araya gedō |
The ālaya heresy, one of the thirty heretical sects named in the 大日經, 住心, chapter 1, that the ālaya is a sort of eternal substance or matter, creative and containing all forms; when considered as a whole, it is non-existent, or contains nothing; when considered 'unrolled,' or phenomenal, it fills the universe. It seems to be of the nature of materialism as opposed to the idealistic conception of the ālaya-vijñāna. |
雁ノ穴火口 see styles |
gannoanakakou / gannoanakako がんノあなかこう |
(place-name) Gan-no-ana Crater (of Mount Fuji) |
大乘莊嚴經論 大乘庄严经论 see styles |
dà shéng zhuāng yán jīng lùn da4 sheng2 zhuang1 yan2 jing1 lun4 ta sheng chuang yen ching lun Daijō sōgon kyō ron |
Mahāyānasūtra-laṃkāra-ṭīkā. An exposition of the teachings of the Vijñāna-vāda School, by Asaṅga, tr. A.D. 630-3 by Prabhākaramitra. 13 chuan. |
瞿曇達磨闍那 瞿昙达磨阇那 see styles |
jù tán dá mó shén à ju4 tan2 da2 mo2 shen2 a4 chü t`an ta mo shen a chü tan ta mo shen a Gudon Damajana |
瞿曇法智 Gautama-dharmajñāna, son of the last; tr. 582 a work on karma. |
Variations: |
ana あな |
(1) hole; opening; orifice; perforation; (2) pit; hollow; cavity; hole (e.g. in the ground); (3) burrow; den; lair; holt; hole; (4) deficit; shortage; (financial) hole; loss; (5) gap (left by a missing employee, team member, etc.); vacancy; opening; (6) flaw; fault; defect; weak point; hole (in a theory, plan, etc.); loophole; (7) (See 穴場・1) good place not many people know about; well-kept secret; (8) upset victory (with a large payoff); long shot; dark horse; (9) (theatre jargon) (See 枡・2) (partitioned) box (type of floor seating in a traditional Japanese theatre); (10) (archaism) hiding place; hideout |
サンタアナ山地 see styles |
santaanasanchi / santanasanchi サンタアナさんち |
(place-name) Santa Ana Mountains |
サンタアナ高地 see styles |
santaanakouchi / santanakochi サンタアナこうち |
(place-name) Cuchilla de Santa Ana (highlands) |
度一切世間苦惱 度一切世间苦恼 see styles |
dù yī qiè shì jiān kǔn ǎo du4 yi1 qie4 shi4 jian1 kun3 ao3 tu i ch`ieh shih chien k`un ao tu i chieh shih chien kun ao Do issai seken kunō |
Sarvalōkadhātupadravodvega-pratyuttīrṇa. ' One who redeems men from the misery of all worlds. A fictitious Buddha who dwelled west of our universe, an incarnation of the tenth son of Mahābhijñājñāna bhibhū.' Eite1. |
聴神経腫瘍協会 see styles |
choushinkeishuyoukyoukai / choshinkeshuyokyokai ちょうしんけいしゅようきょうかい |
(o) Acoustic Neuroma Association; ANA |
Variations: |
ringuana; ringu ana リングアナ; リング・アナ |
(abbreviation) {sports} ring announcer |
Entries with 2nd row of characters: The 2nd row is Simplified Chinese.
This page contains 34 results for "Ana" in Chinese and/or Japanese.Information about this dictionary:
Apparently, we were the first ones who were crazy enough to think that western people might want a combined Chinese, Japanese, and Buddhist dictionary.
A lot of westerners can't tell the difference between Chinese and Japanese - and there is a reason for that. Chinese characters and even whole words were borrowed by Japan from the Chinese language in the 5th century. Much of the time, if a word or character is used in both languages, it will have the same or a similar meaning. However, this is not always true. Language evolves, and meanings independently change in each language.
Example: The Chinese character 湯 for soup (hot water) has come to mean bath (hot water) in Japanese. They have the same root meaning of "hot water", but a 湯屋 sign on a bathhouse in Japan would lead a Chinese person to think it was a "soup house" or a place to get a bowl of soup. See this: Japanese Bath House
This dictionary uses the EDICT and CC-CEDICT dictionary files.
EDICT data is the property of the Electronic Dictionary Research and Development Group, and is used in conformance with the Group's
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Chinese Buddhist terms come from Dictionary of Chinese Buddhist Terms by William Edward Soothill and Lewis Hodous. This is commonly referred to as "Soothill's'". It was first published in 1937 (and is now off copyright so we can use it here). Some of these definitions may be misleading, incomplete, or dated, but 95% of it is good information. Every professor who teaches Buddhism or Eastern Religion has a copy of this on their bookshelf. We incorporated these 16,850 entries into our dictionary database ourselves (it was lot of work).
Combined, these cover 1,007,753 Japanese, Chinese, and Buddhist characters, words, idioms, names, placenames, and short phrases.
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