There are 50 total results for your 神道 search.
Characters | Pronunciation Romanization |
Simple Dictionary Definition |
神道 see styles |
shén dào shen2 dao4 shen tao shintou(p); shindou / shinto(p); shindo しんとう(P); しんどう |
More info & calligraphy: ShintoShinto; Shintoism; (surname) Jindō The spirit world of devas, asuras, and pretas. Psychology, or the doctrines concerning the soul. The teaching of Buddha. Shinto, the Way of the Gods, a Japanese national religion. |
神道家 see styles |
shintouka / shintoka しんとうか |
Shintoist |
神道寺 see styles |
kandouji / kandoji かんどうじ |
(place-name) Kandouji |
神道山 see styles |
jindousan / jindosan じんどうさん |
(place-name) Jindousan |
神道教 see styles |
shén dào jiào shen2 dao4 jiao4 shen tao chiao |
Shinto |
神道集 see styles |
shintoushuu / shintoshu しんとうしゅう |
(work) Shintoshu (14th century Japanese Shinto text); (wk) Shintoshu (14th century Japanese Shinto text) |
俗神道 see styles |
zokushintou / zokushinto ぞくしんとう |
(term used by Reform Shintoists) (See 復古神道) Folk Shinto; syncretized Shinto sect |
古神道 see styles |
koshintou / koshinto こしんとう |
(hist) ancient Shinto (as practiced prior to the introduction of Confucianism and Buddhism to Japan) |
明神道 see styles |
myoujindou / myojindo みょうじんどう |
(place-name) Myōjindō |
橘神道 see styles |
tachibanashintou / tachibanashinto たちばなしんとう |
(See 垂加神道) Tachibana Shinto (Edo-period sect of Suika Shinto popularized by Mitsuyoshi Tachibana) |
神道信者 see styles |
shintoushinja / shintoshinja しんとうしんじゃ |
Shintoist; follower of Shintoism |
神道大教 see styles |
shintoutaikyou / shintotaikyo しんとうたいきょう |
Shinto Taikyo (sect of Shinto) |
神道尖鼠 see styles |
shintoutogarinezumi; shintoutogarinezumi / shintotogarinezumi; shintotogarinezumi しんとうとがりねずみ; シントウトガリネズミ |
(kana only) Shinto shrew (Sorex shinto) |
一実神道 see styles |
ichijitsushintou / ichijitsushinto いちじつしんとう |
(abbreviation) (rare) (See 山王一実神道) Ichijitsu Shinto (alt. name for Hie Shinto: a form of Shinto heavily influenced by Tendai) |
三輪神道 see styles |
miwashintou / miwashinto みわしんとう |
(See 両部神道) Miwa Shinto (sect of amalgamated Shinto developed in the Muromachi Period) |
両部神道 see styles |
ryoubushintou / ryobushinto りょうぶしんとう |
Shinto-Buddhist amalgamation; dual-aspect Shinto |
伊勢神道 see styles |
iseshintou / iseshinto いせしんとう |
Ise Shinto (school of Shinto established the Watarai family priests of Ise Jingu's Outer Shrine) |
伯家神道 see styles |
hakkeshintou; hakukeshintou / hakkeshinto; hakukeshinto はっけしんとう; はくけしんとう |
Hakke Shinto (Shinto tradition transmitted by the House of Hakuo Shirakawa); Hakuke Shinto |
倭文神道 see styles |
shitoorijindou / shitoorijindo しとおりじんどう |
(place-name) Shitoorijindō |
儒家神道 see styles |
jukashintou / jukashinto じゅかしんとう |
Confucian Shinto |
吉川神道 see styles |
yoshikawashintou / yoshikawashinto よしかわしんとう |
Yoshikawa Shinto (Confucianist form of Shinto, stripped of Buddhist influence) |
吉田神道 see styles |
yoshidashintou / yoshidashinto よしだしんとう |
Yoshida Shinto; fusion of Shinto, Buddhism, Confucianism and Taoism stressing traditional Japanese elements |
国家神道 see styles |
kokkashintou / kokkashinto こっかしんとう |
(hist) State Shintō; nationalistic and ideological form of Shinto, abolished in 1945 |
垂加神道 see styles |
suikashintou; shidemasushintou / suikashinto; shidemasushinto すいかしんとう; しでますしんとう |
Suika Shinto (fusion of Shinto with Chinese elements, esp. neo-Confucianism); Shidemasu Shinto |
天台神道 see styles |
tendaishintou / tendaishinto てんだいしんとう |
(rare) (See 日吉神道) Tendai Shinto (alt. name for Hie Shinto: a form of Shinto heavily influenced by Tendai) |
山王神道 see styles |
sannoushintou / sannoshinto さんのうしんとう |
Sanno Shinto (branch of Shinto formed in the Tendai school of Buddhism) |
弓矢神道 see styles |
yumiyashintou / yumiyashinto ゆみやしんとう |
(See 吉田神道) Yumiya Shinto (Edo-period sect of Yoshida Shinto) |
御流神道 see styles |
goryuushintou / goryushinto ごりゅうしんとう |
(See 両部神道) Goryū Shinto (sect of amalgamated Shinto) |
復古神道 see styles |
fukkoshintou / fukkoshinto ふっこしんとう |
Fukko Shinto; Restoration Shinto; Reform Shinto (prominent 18th century form of Shinto, based on the classics, and free from Confucian and Buddhist influences) |
教派神道 see styles |
kyouhashintou / kyohashinto きょうはしんとう |
Sect Shintō; group of folk religious sects, as opposed to State Shintō and later Shrine Shintō |
日吉神道 see styles |
hieshintou / hieshinto ひえしんとう |
(rare) (See 山王一実神道) Hie Shinto (form of Shinto heavily influenced by Tendai) |
横山神道 see styles |
yokoyamashintou / yokoyamashinto よこやましんとう |
Yokoyama Shinto (Edo-period Shinto sect promoted by Masae Yokoyama) |
法華神道 see styles |
hokkeshintou / hokkeshinto ほっけしんとう |
(See 法華宗・1) Hokke Shinto (Shinto doctrines based on Nichiren Buddhism) |
烏伝神道 see styles |
udenshintou / udenshinto うでんしんとう |
Uden Shinto (Shinto doctrines enunciated by Kamo no Norikiyo of Kamigamo Shrine) |
琉球神道 see styles |
ryuukyuushintou / ryukyushinto りゅうきゅうしんとう |
Ryukyuan religion |
皇室神道 see styles |
koushitsushintou / koshitsushinto こうしつしんとう |
Imperial Household Shinto |
真言神道 see styles |
shingonshintou / shingonshinto しんごんしんとう |
(See 両部神道) Shingon Shinto; any branch of Shinto based on Shingon Buddhist teachings |
神社神道 see styles |
shén shè shén dào shen2 she4 shen2 dao4 shen she shen tao jinjashintou / jinjashinto じんじゃしんとう |
Shrine Shintō; form of Shintō that focuses on worship in shrines, in contrast to folk and sectarian practices the Shinto faith centered on shrines |
神神道道 see styles |
shén shen dào dào shen2 shen5 dao4 dao4 shen shen tao tao |
odd; weird; abnormal |
習合神道 see styles |
shuugoushintou / shugoshinto しゅうごうしんとう |
(See 両部神道,山王神道) syncretized Shinto; amalgamated Shinto |
雲伝神道 see styles |
undenshintou / undenshinto うんでんしんとう |
Unden Shinto (branch of Shinto based on Shingon Buddhist teachings) |
神道五部書 see styles |
shintougobusho / shintogobusho しんとうごぶしょ |
five fundamental texts of Ise Shinto |
神道修成派 see styles |
shintoushuuseiha / shintoshuseha しんとうしゅうせいは |
Shinto Shūsei-ha (sect of Shinto) |
神道十三派 see styles |
shintoujuusanpa / shintojusanpa しんとうじゅうさんぱ |
(See 教派神道) the thirteen sects of Sect Shinto (Fuso-kyo, Taisha-kyo, Jikko-kyo, Konko-kyo, Kurozumi-kyo, Misogi-kyo, Ontake-kyo, Shinri-kyo, Shinshu-kyo, Shinto Shusei-ha, Shinto Taikyo, Taisei-kyo, Tenri-kyo) |
神道大成教 see styles |
shintoutaiseikyou / shintotaisekyo しんとうたいせいきょう |
Shinto Taiseikyō (sect of Shinto) |
土御門神道 see styles |
tsuchimikadoshintou / tsuchimikadoshinto つちみかどしんとう |
(See 陰陽道) Tsuchimikado Shinto (synthesis of Shinto and Onmyōdō formulated by Yasutomi Tsuchimikado in the mid-Edo period) |
神道国際学会 see styles |
shintoukokusaigakkai / shintokokusaigakkai しんとうこくさいがっかい |
(org) International Shinto Foundation; ISF; (o) International Shinto Foundation; ISF |
神道政治連盟 see styles |
shintouseijirenmei / shintosejirenme しんとうせいじれんめい |
(org) Shinto Political League; (o) Shinto Political League |
山王一実神道 see styles |
sannouichijitsushintou / sannoichijitsushinto さんのういちじつしんとう |
(See 日吉神道) Sannou Ichijitsu Shinto (alt. name for Hie Shinto: a form of Shinto heavily influenced by Tendai) |
Variations: |
kannagaranomichi; kamunagaranomichi かんながらのみち; かむながらのみち |
(exp,n) {Shinto} the Way of the Gods; Shinto; Shintoism |
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.
Just because a word appears here does not mean it is appropriate for a tattoo, your business name, etc. Please consult a professional before doing anything stupid with this data.
We do offer Chinese and Japanese Tattoo Services. We'll also be happy to help you translate something for other purposes.
No warranty as to the correctness, potential vulgarity, or clarity is expressed or implied. We did not write any of these definitions (though we occasionally act as a contributor/editor to the CC-CEDICT project). You are using this dictionary for free, and you get what you pay for.
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