There are 28 total results for your 尸羅 search.
Characters | Pronunciation Romanization |
Simple Dictionary Definition |
尸羅 尸罗 see styles |
shī luó shi1 luo2 shih lo shira |
sila (Buddhism) Sila, 尸; 尸怛羅 intp. by 淸凉 pure and cool, i.e. chaste; also by 戒 restraint, or keeping the commandments; also by 性善 of good disposition. It is the second pāramitā, moral purity, i. e. of thought, word, and deed. The four conditions of śīla are chaste, calm, quiet, extinguished, i. e. no longer perturbed by the passions. Also, perhaps śīla, a stone, i. e. a precious stone, pearl, or coral. For the ten śīlas or commandments v. 十戒, the first five, or pañca-śīla 五戒, are for all Buddhists. |
尸羅幢 尸罗幢 see styles |
shī luó chuáng shi1 luo2 chuang2 shih lo ch`uang shih lo chuang shira dō |
A curtain made of chaste precious stones. |
尸羅會 尸罗会 see styles |
shī luó huì shi1 luo2 hui4 shih lo hui shira e |
precepts assembly |
尸羅蘊 尸罗蕴 see styles |
shī luó yùn shi1 luo2 yun4 shih lo yün shiraun |
the constituent of morality |
具尸羅 具尸罗 see styles |
jù shī luó ju4 shi1 luo2 chü shih lo gushira |
endowed with moral discipline |
嗢尸羅 嗢尸罗 see styles |
wà shī luó wa4 shi1 luo2 wa shih lo ushira |
uśīra, fragrant root of Andropogon muricatus. |
德尸羅 德尸罗 see styles |
dé shī luó de2 shi1 luo2 te shih lo Tokushira |
(德叉尸羅) Taksaśīla, an ancient kingdom and city, the Taxila of the Greeks. Lat. 35°8' N., Long. 72° 44' E. |
拘尸羅 拘尸罗 see styles |
jū shī luó ju1 shi1 luo2 chü shih lo Kushira |
Kuśinagara |
淨尸羅 淨尸罗 see styles |
jìng shī luó jing4 shi1 luo2 ching shih lo jō shira |
the pure precepts |
突尸羅 突尸罗 see styles |
tú shī luó tu2 shi1 luo2 t`u shih lo tu shih lo toshira |
immoral |
尸羅律儀 尸罗律仪 see styles |
shī luó lǜ yí shi1 luo2 lv4 yi2 shih lo lü i shira ritsugi |
the restraints of morality |
尸羅淸淨 尸罗淸淨 see styles |
shī luó qīng jìng shi1 luo2 qing1 jing4 shih lo ch`ing ching shih lo ching ching shira shōjō |
Moral purity, essential to enter into samadhi. |
尸羅缽頗 尸罗钵颇 see styles |
shī luó bō pǒ shi1 luo2 bo1 po3 shih lo po p`o shih lo po po Shirabaha |
Śīlaprabha |
尸羅跋提 尸罗跋提 see styles |
shī luó bá tí shi1 luo2 ba2 ti2 shih lo pa t`i shih lo pa ti Shirabadai |
Sravasti, idem 舍衞. |
尸羅達摩 尸罗达摩 see styles |
shī luó dá mó shi1 luo2 da2 mo2 shih lo ta mo Shiradatsuma |
Śīladharma |
尸羅達磨 尸罗达磨 see styles |
shī luó dá mó shi1 luo2 da2 mo2 shih lo ta mo Shiradaruma |
Śīladharma, a śramaṇa of Khotan. |
尸羅鉢頗 see styles |
shī luō bō pō shi1 luo1 bo1 po1 shih lo po p`o shih lo po po |
Śīlaprabha. the Sanskrit name of a learned monk. |
具尸羅住 具尸罗住 see styles |
jù shī luó zhù ju4 shi1 luo2 zhu4 chü shih lo chu gushirajū |
to abide endowed with moral discipline |
受淨尸羅 受淨尸罗 see styles |
shòu jìng shī luó shou4 jing4 shi1 luo2 shou ching shih lo ju jōshira |
receving the pure precepts |
德叉尸羅 德叉尸罗 see styles |
dé chā shī luó de2 cha1 shi1 luo2 te ch`a shih lo te cha shih lo Tokushashira |
Takṣaśīla |
竺刹尸羅 竺刹尸罗 see styles |
zhú chà shī luó zhu2 cha4 shi1 luo2 chu ch`a shih lo chu cha shih lo Chikuse shira |
Taksaśīla, v. 呾叉始羅. |
尸羅不淸淨 尸罗不淸淨 see styles |
shī luó bù qīng jìng shi1 luo2 bu4 qing1 jing4 shih lo pu ch`ing ching shih lo pu ching ching shira fushōjō |
If the śīla, or moral state, is not pure, none can enter samādhi. |
尸羅婆羅蜜 尸罗婆罗蜜 see styles |
shī luó pó luó mì shi1 luo2 po2 luo2 mi4 shih lo p`o lo mi shih lo po lo mi shira haramitsu |
śīla-pāramitā. Morality, the second of the pāramitās. |
尸羅拔陀提 尸罗拔陀提 see styles |
shī luó bá tuó tí shi1 luo2 ba2 tuo2 ti2 shih lo pa t`o t`i shih lo pa to ti Shirabadadai |
戒賢 Śīlabhadra, a prince mentioned in 賢 愚 經 6. |
尸羅波羅蜜 尸罗波罗蜜 see styles |
shī luó bō luó mì shi1 luo2 bo1 luo2 mi4 shih lo po lo mi shira haramitsu |
śīla-pāramitā |
尸羅跋陀羅 尸罗跋陀罗 see styles |
shī luó bá tuó luó shi1 luo2 ba2 tuo2 luo2 shih lo pa t`o lo shih lo pa to lo Shirabadara |
Śīlabhadra. A learned monk of Nalanda, teacher of Hsumzang, A. D. 625. |
尸羅阿迭多 尸罗阿迭多 see styles |
shī luó ā dié duō shi1 luo2 a1 die2 duo1 shih lo a tieh to Shiraitta |
Śīladitya, son of Pratapaditya and brother of Rajyavardhana. Under thc spiritual auspices of Avalokiteśvara, he became king of Kanyakubja A. D. 606 and conquered India and the Punjab. He was merciful to all creatures, strained drinking water for horses and elephants, was a most liberal patron of Buddhism, re-established the great quinquennial assembly, built many stūpas, showed special favour to Śīlabhadra and Xuanzang, and composed the 八大靈塔梵讚 Aṣṭama-hāśrī -caitya-saṃskṛta-stotra. He reigned about forty years. |
阿尸羅婆那 阿尸罗婆那 see styles |
ā shī luó pó nà a1 shi1 luo2 po2 na4 a shih lo p`o na a shih lo po na Ashirabana |
Śravaṇā, which M.W. gives as 'one of the lunar asterisms... α, β, γ, Aquilae'. Śravaṇā is the month which falls in July-August. |
Entries with 2nd row of characters: The 2nd row is Simplified Chinese.
This page contains 28 results for "尸羅" 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
license.
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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