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Simple Dictionary Definition |
地獄 地狱 see styles |
dì yù di4 yu4 ti yü jigoku じごく |
More info & calligraphy: Hell(1) {Buddh} hell realm; Naraka; (2) {Christn} Hell; (3) hell; misery; nightmare; inferno; (4) place where a volcano or hot springs constantly spew smoke or steam; (place-name) Jigoku naraka, 捺落迦 (or 那落迦) ; niraya 泥犂; explained by 不樂 joyless; 可厭 disgusting, hateful; 苦具, 苦器 means of suffering; if 地獄 earth-prison; 冥府 the shades, or departments of darkness. Earth-prison is generally intp. as hell or the hells; it may also be termed purgatory; one of the six gati or ways of transmigration. The hells are divided into three classes: I. Central, or radical, 根本地獄 consisting of (1) The eight hot hells. These were the original hells of primitive Buddhism, and are supposed to be located umder the southern continent Jambudvīpa 瞻部州, 500 yojanas below the surface. (a) 等活 or 更活 Saṃjīva, rebirth, where after many kinds of suffering a cold wind blows over the soul and returns it to this life as it was before, hence the name 等活. (b) 黑繩 Kaslasūtra, where the sufferer is bound with black chains and chopped or sawn asunder. (c) 線合; 衆合; 堆壓 Saṃghāta, where are multitudes of implements of torture, or the falling of mountains upon the sufferer. (d) 號呌; 呼呼; 叫喚 Raurava, hell of wailing. (e) 大呌; 大號呌; 大呼 Mahāraurava, hell of great wailing. (f) 炎熱; 燒炙 Tapana, hell of fames and burning. (g) 大熱; 大燒炙; 大炎熱 Pratāpana, hell of molten lead. (h) 無間; 河鼻旨; 阿惟越致; 阿毗至; 阿鼻; 阿毗 Avīci, unintermitted suffering, where sinners die and are reborn to suffer without interval. (2) The eight cold hells 八寒地獄. (a) 頞浮陀地獄 Arbuda, where the cold causes blisters. (b) 尼刺部陀 Nirarbuda, colder still causing the blisters to burst. (c) 頞哳吒; 阿吒吒 Atata, where this is the only possible sound from frozen lips. (d) 臛臛婆; 阿波波 Hahava or Apapa, where it is so cold that only this sound can be uttered. (e) 虎虎婆 Hāhādhara or Huhuva, where only this sound can be uttered. (f) 嗢鉢羅; 鬱鉢羅 (or 優鉢羅) Utpala, or 尼羅鳥 (or 漚) 鉢羅 Nīlotpala, where the skin is frozen like blue lotus buds. (g) 鉢特摩 Padma, where the skin is frozen and bursts open like red lotus buds. (h) 摩訶鉢特摩 Mahāpadma, ditto like great red lotus buds. Somewhat different names are also given. Cf. 倶舍論 8; 智度論 16; 涅槃經 11. II. The secondary hells are called 近邊地獄 adjacent hells or 十六遊增 each of its four sides, opening from each such door are four adjacent hells, in all sixteen; thus with the original eight there are 136. A list of eighteen hells is given in the 十八泥梨經. III. A third class is called the 孤地獄 (獨地獄) Lokāntarika, or isolated hells in mountains, deserts, below the earth and above it. Eitel says in regard to the eight hot hells that they range 'one beneath the other in tiers which begin at a depth of 11,900 yojanas and reach to a depth of 40,000 yojanas'. The cold hells are under 'the two Tchahavālas and range shaft-like one below the other, but so that this shaft is gradually widening to the fourth hell and then narrowing itself again so that the first and last hell have the shortest, those in the centre the longest diameter'. 'Every universe has the same number of hells, ' but 'the northern continent has no hell whatever, the two continents east and west of Meru have only small Lokāntarika hells... whilst all the other hells are required for the inhabitants of the southern continent '. It may be noted that the purpose of these hells is definitely punitive, as well as purgatorial. Yama is the judge and ruler, assisted by eighteen officers and a host of demons, who order or administer the various degrees of torture. 'His sister performs the same duties with regard to female criminals, ' and it may be mentioned that the Chinese have added the 血盆池 Lake of the bloody bath, or 'placenta tank' for women who die in childbirth. Release from the hells is in the power of the monks by tantric means. |
火狗 see styles |
huǒ gǒu huo3 gou3 huo kou kaku |
More info & calligraphy: Fire Dog |
陰司 阴司 see styles |
yīn sī yin1 si1 yin ssu |
More info & calligraphy: Hell / Judges of Hell |
觀世音 观世音 see styles |
guān shì yīn guan1 shi4 yin1 kuan shih yin Kanzeon かんぜおん |
More info & calligraphy: Goddess of Mercy and Compassion(out-dated kanji) Avalokiteshvara (Bodhisattva); Avalokitesvara; Kannon; Kwannon; Guanyin; Buddhist deity of compassion Regarder of the world's sounds, or cries, the so-called Goddess of Mercy; also known as 觀音; 觀世音善薩; 觀自在 (觀世自在); 觀尹; 光世音 (the last being the older form). Avalokiteśvara, v. 阿 8. Originally represented as a male, the images are now generally those of a female figure. The meaning of the term is in doubt; it is intp. as above, but the term 觀自在 (觀世自在) accords with the idea of Sovereign Regarder and is not associated with sounds or cries. Guanyin is one of the triad of Amida, is represented on his left, and is also represented as crowned with Amida; but there are as many as thirty-three different forms of Guanyin, sometimes with a bird, a vase, a willow wand, a pearl, a 'thousand' eyes and hands, etc., and, when as bestower of children, carrying a child. The island of Putuo (Potala) is the chief centre of Guanyin worship, where she is the protector of all in distress, especially of those who go to sea. There are many sūtras, etc., devoted to the cult, but its provenance and the date of its introduction to China are still in doubt. Chapter 25 of the Lotus Sūtra is devoted to Guanyin, and is the principal scripture of the cult; its date is uncertain. Guanyin is sometimes confounded with Amitābha and Maitreya. She is said to be the daughter of king Śubhavyūha 妙莊王, who had her killed by 'stifling because the sword of the executioner broke without hurting her. Her spirit went to hell; but hell changed into paradise. Yama sent her back to life to save his hell, when she was miraculously transported on a Lotus flower to the island of Poo-too'. Eitel. |
冥府 see styles |
míng fǔ ming2 fu3 ming fu meifu / mefu めいふ |
underworld; hell (1) (See 冥土) realm of the dead; the other world; underworld; (2) hell The palace of darkness, Hades. |
閻魔 阎魔 see styles |
yán mó yan2 mo2 yen mo enma えんま |
(Buddhism) Yama, the King of Hell {Buddh} Yama (King of Hell who judges the dead); Enma; (dei) Yama (King of Hell who judges the dead); Enma 閻王 閻羅; (閻魔王); 閻摩羅; 閻老 Yama, also v. 夜; 閻羅王 Yama. (1) In the Vedas the god of the dead, with whom the spirits of the departed dwell. He was son of the Sun and had a twin sister Yamī or Yamuna. By some they were looked upon as the first human pair. (2) In later Brahmanic mythology, one of the eight Lokapālas, guardian of the South and ruler of the Yamadevaloka and judge of the dead. (3) In Buddhist mythology, the regent of the Nārakas, residing south of Jambudvīpa, outside of the Cakravālas, in a palace of copper and iron. Originally he is described as a king of Vaiśālī, who, when engaged in a bloody war, wished he were master of hell, and was accordingly reborn as Yama in hell together with his eighteen generals and his army of 80,000 men, who now serve him in purgatory. His sister Yamī deals with female culprits. Three times in every twenty-four hours demon pours into Yama's mouth boiling copper (by way of punishment), his subordinates receiving the same dose at the same time, until their sins are expiated, when he will be reborn as Samantarāja 普王. In China he rules the fifth court of purgatory. In some sources he is spoken of as ruling the eighteen judges of purgatory. |
阿鼻 see styles |
ā bí a1 bi2 a pi abi あび |
Ceaseless pain (Sanskrit: Avici), one of the Buddhist hells; fig. hell; hell on earth {Buddh} Avici (lowest level of hell) Avīci, 阿鼻旨; 阿鼻脂; 阿鼻至; the last and deepest of the eight hot hells, where the culprits suffer, die, and are instantly reborn to suffering, without interruption 無間. It is the 阿鼻地獄 (阿鼻旨地獄) or the 阿鼻焦熱地獄hell of unintermitted scorching; or the阿鼻喚地獄 hell of unintermitted wailing; its wall, out of which there is no escape, is the 阿鼻大城. |
阿鼻地獄 阿鼻地狱 see styles |
ā bí dì yù a1 bi2 di4 yu4 a pi ti yü abijigoku あびじごく |
(Buddhism) the Avici Hell, the last and most painful of the eight hot hells {Buddh} Avici hell (the eighth and most painful of the eight hells) avīci hell |
七趣 see styles |
qī qù qi1 qu4 ch`i ch`ü chi chü shichishu |
The seven gati or states of sentient beings- nārakagati, in hell; preta, hungry ghost; tiryagyoni, animal; manuṣya, man; ṛṣi, a genius or higher spiritual being; deva, god; asura, demon of the higher order. |
三塗 三涂 see styles |
sān tú san1 tu2 san t`u san tu sanzu |
The 塗 mire is interpreted by 途 a road, i.e. the three unhappy gati or ways; (a) 火塗 to the fires of hell; (b) 血塗 to the hell of blood, where as animals they devour each other; (c) 刀塗 the asipattra hell of swords, where the leaves and grasses are sharp-edged swords. Cf. 三惡趣. |
三小 see styles |
sān xiǎo san1 xiao3 san hsiao mitsushou / mitsusho みつしょう |
(Tw) (vulgar) what the hell? (from Taiwanese 啥潲, Tai-lo pr. [siánn-siâ], equivalent to Mandarin 什麼|什么[shen2 me5]) (surname) Mitsushou |
三悪 see styles |
sanaku; sannaku; sanmaku さんあく; さんなく; さんまく |
(1) (abbreviation) {Buddh} (See 三悪道・さんあくどう) the world of hungry spirits and the world of animals; three evil worlds hell; (2) (さんあく only) three evils (prostitution, drugs and venereal diseases) |
三逆 see styles |
sān nì san1 ni4 san ni sangyaku |
The three unpardonable sins of Devadatta, which sent him to the Avici hell— schism, stoning the Buddha to the shedding of his blood, killing a nun. |
仆街 see styles |
pū jiē pu1 jie1 p`u chieh pu chieh |
drop dead!; go to hell!; fuck you! (Cantonese) |
儘よ see styles |
mamayo ままよ |
(interjection) (kana only) whatever; never mind; I don't care; the hell with it |
冥官 see styles |
míng guān ming2 guan1 ming kuan meikan |
The rulers in Hades. |
冥王 see styles |
míng wáng ming2 wang2 ming wang meiou / meo めいおう |
the king of hell (1) {grmyth} (See ハデス・1) Hades (god); (2) {rommyth} (See プルートー・1) Pluto (god); (surname) Meiou |
冥界 see styles |
míng jiè ming2 jie4 ming chieh meikai / mekai めいかい |
ghost world hades; realm of the dead Hades, or the three lower forms of incarnation, i.e. hell, preta, animal. |
劍山 剑山 see styles |
jiàn shān jian4 shan1 chien shan kensan |
劍樹地獄 Asipattra. The hill of swords, or sword-leaf trees hell, one of the sixteen hells; also called 刀刃路. |
去死 see styles |
qù sǐ qu4 si3 ch`ü ssu chü ssu |
go to hell!; drop dead! |
呼呼 see styles |
hū hū hu1 hu1 hu hu koko |
(onom.) sound of the wind or the breathing of sb who is sound asleep The raurava or fourth hot hell. |
嗢鉢 嗢钵 see styles |
wà bō wa4 bo1 wa po otsuhatsu |
(嗢鉢羅) utpala, the blue lotus; the 6th cold hell. |
地府 see styles |
dì fǔ di4 fu3 ti fu |
hell; the nether world; Hades |
地藏 see styles |
dì zàng di4 zang4 ti tsang jizou / jizo じぞう |
Kṣitigarbha, the Bodhisattva of the Great Vow (to save all souls before accepting Bodhi); also translated Earth Treasury, Earth Womb, or Earth Store Bodhisattva (surname) Jizou Ti-tsang, J. Jizō, Kṣitigarbha, 乞叉底蘗沙; Earth-store, Earth-treasury, or Earthwomb. One of the group of eight Dhvani- Bodhisattvas. With hints of a feminine origin, he is now the guardian of the earth. Though associated with Yama as overlord, and with the dead and the hells, his role is that of saviour. Depicted with the alarum staff with its six rings, he is accredited with power over the hells and is devoted to the saving of all creatures between the nirvana of Śākyamuni and the advent of Maitreya the fifth century he has been especially considered as the deliverer from the hells. His central place in China is at Chiu-hua-shan, forty li south-west of Ch'ing-yang in Anhui. In Japan he is also the protector of travellers by land and his image accordingly appears on the roads; bereaved parents put stones by his images to seek his aid in relieving the labours of their dead in the task of piling stones on the banks of the Buddhist Styx; he also helps women in labour. He is described as holding a place between the gods and men on the one hand and the hells on the other for saving all in distress; some say he is an incarnation of Yama. At dawn he sits immobile on the earth 地 and meditates on the myriads of its beings 藏. When represented as a monk, it may be through the influence of a Korean monk who is considered to be his incarnation, and who came to China in 653 and died in 728 at the age of 99 after residing at Chiu-hua-shan for seventy-five years: his body, not decaying, is said to have been gilded over and became an object of worship. Many have confused 眞羅 part of Korea with 暹羅 Siam. There are other developments of Ti-tsang, such as the 六地藏 Six Ti-tsang, i. e. severally converting or transforming those in the hells, pretas, animals, asuras, men, and the devas; these six Ti-tsang have different images and symbols. Ti-tsang has also six messengers 六使者: Yama for transforming those in hell; the pearl-holder for pretas; the strong one or animals; the devīof mercy for asuras; the devī of the treasure for human beings; one who has charge of the heavens for the devas. There is also the 延命地藏 Yanming Ti-tsang, who controls length of days and who is approached, as also may be P'u-hsien, for that Purpose; his two assistants are the Supervisors of good and evil 掌善 and 掌惡. Under another form, as 勝軍地藏 Ti-tsang is chiefly associated with the esoteric cult. The benefits derived from his worship are many, some say ten, others say twenty-eight. His vows are contained in the 地藏菩薩本願經. There is also the 大乘大集地藏十電經 tr. by Xuanzang in 10 juan in the seventh century, which probably influenced the spread of the Ti-tsang cult. |
堕獄 see styles |
dagoku だごく |
going to hell; falling into hell |
墮獄 堕狱 see styles |
duò yù duo4 yu4 to yü dagoku |
fall into hell |
夜摩 see styles |
yè mó ye4 mo2 yeh mo yama |
Yama, 'originally the Aryan god of the dead, living in a heaven above the world, the regent of the South; but Brahminism transferred his abode to hell. Both views have been retained by Buddhism.' Eitel. Yama in Indian mythology is ruler over the dead and judge in the hells, is 'grim in aspect, green in colour, clothed in red, riding on a buffalo, and holding a club in one hand and noose in the other': he has two four-eyed watch-dogs. M. W. The usual form is 閻摩 q. v. |
大叫 see styles |
dà jiào da4 jiao4 ta chiao daikyō |
hell of great wailing |
夭壽 夭寿 see styles |
yāo shòu yao1 shou4 yao shou |
to die young; (Tw) (curse word) drop dead; go to hell; (literary) short life and long life |
奈利 see styles |
nài lì nai4 li4 nai li nari なり |
(given name) Nari idem 泥梨 niraya, hell. |
奈河 see styles |
nài hé nai4 he2 nai ho nagawa ながわ |
(surname) Nagawa The inevitable river in purgatory to be crossed by all. |
奈落 see styles |
nài luò nai4 luo4 nai lo naraku ならく |
(1) (Buddhist term) Naraka (san: naraka); hell; hades; (2) very bottom; the end; worst possible circumstances; (3) theatre basement; theater basement hell |
婆藪 婆薮 see styles |
pó sǒu po2 sou3 p`o sou po sou basō |
vasu 婆萸; good; rich; sweet; dry; according to Monier-Williams, eight personifications of natural phenomena; eight; the sun, etc.; father of Kṛṣṇa; intp. as the first to offer slain sacrifices to Heaven, to have been cast into hell, but after countless kalpas to have become a disciple of Buddha. Also called Vasudeva. Also name of certain devas, e.g. Viṣṇu; and other beings whom men serve, e.g. a father. |
幽冥 see styles |
yōu míng you1 ming2 yu ming yū mei ゆうめい |
dark; hell; netherworld; hades semidarkness; deep and strange; hades; the present and the other world; dark and light darkness |
弾幕 see styles |
danmaku だんまく |
(1) {mil} (artillery) barrage; (2) {vidg} bullet hell; curtain fire; screen-filling barrage of (usu. slow-moving) enemy bullets; (3) (net-sl) barrage of scrolling comments (overlaid on an online video) |
捺落 see styles |
naraku ならく |
(1) (Buddhist term) Naraka (san: naraka); hell; hades; (2) very bottom; the end; worst possible circumstances |
搞毛 see styles |
gǎo máo gao3 mao2 kao mao |
(dialect) what are you doing?; what the hell? |
撒賴 撒赖 see styles |
sā lài sa1 lai4 sa lai |
to make a scene; to raise hell |
擺爛 摆烂 see styles |
bǎi làn bai3 lan4 pai lan |
(neologism c. 2014) (slang) to stop striving (esp. when one knows one cannot succeed); to let it all go to hell; (sports) to tank |
救拔 see styles |
jiù bá jiu4 ba2 chiu pa kyūbachi |
To save and drag out of suffering, e.g. hell. |
業火 业火 see styles |
yè huǒ ye4 huo3 yeh huo gouka / goka ごうか |
(1) hellfire; flames of hell; (2) raging fire; large fire; (3) {Buddh} fire that consumes an evildoer The fires of evil karma; the fires of the hells. |
死ね see styles |
shine しね |
(expression) (See 死ぬ・1) drop dead; go to hell; fuck you; fuck off and die |
死王 see styles |
sǐ wáng si3 wang2 ssu wang shiō |
Yama, 焰魔 as lord of death and hell. |
汚泥 see styles |
odei / ode おでい |
(1) sludge; slime; dregs; mire; (2) hopeless situation; hell; despair |
泥人 see styles |
ní rén ni2 ren2 ni jen nainin |
clay figurine A sufferer in niraya, or hell, or doomed to it. |
泥犁 see styles |
ní lí ni2 li2 ni li deiri |
(Buddhism) Naraka niraya, intp. as joyless, i. e. hell; also 泥梨 (泥梨耶); 泥梨迦; 泥黎; 泥囉耶; 泥底 v. 捺趣迦 naraka. |
火坑 see styles |
huǒ kēng huo3 keng1 huo k`eng huo keng ka kō |
pit of fire; fig. living hell The fiery pit (of the five desires 五欲); also that of the three ill destinies— the hells, animals, hungry ghosts. |
火湯 火汤 see styles |
huǒ tāng huo3 tang1 huo t`ang huo tang katō |
The hell of liquid fire. |
火聚 see styles |
huǒ jù huo3 ju4 huo chü kaju |
Accumulated fires (of hell); accumulating one's own hell-fires; the body as a heap of fire, i. e. to be feared; the fires of angry passions. |
火車 火车 see styles |
huǒ chē huo3 che1 huo ch`e huo che kasha かしゃ |
train; CL:列[lie4],節|节[jie2],班[ban1],趟[tang4] (1) {Buddh} fiery chariot; (2) kasha (mythical beast said to devour dead bodies); (3) steam locomotive (in China); (4) (abbreviation) (archaism) (See 火車婆) vile old hag The fiery chariot (belonging to the hells); there is also the 火車地獄 hell of the fire-chariot, and the fire-pit with its fiery wheels; the sufferer first freezes, then is tempted into the chariot which bursts into flames and he perishes in the fire pit, a process each sufferer repeats daily 90 koṭīs of times. |
無間 无间 see styles |
wú jiàn wu2 jian4 wu chien muken; mugen むけん; むげん |
very close; no gap between them; continuously; unbroken; hard to separate; indistinguishable (1) ceaselessness; incessancy; (2) (abbreviation) {Buddh} (See 無間地獄) the Avici hell avīci, uninterrupted, unseparated, without intermission. |
牛頭 牛头 see styles |
niú tóu niu2 tou2 niu t`ou niu tou gozu ごづ |
ox head; ox-head shaped wine vessel {Buddh} (See 牛頭馬頭) ox-headed demon (in hell); (surname) Gozu The ox-head lictors in the hells. |
獄卒 狱卒 see styles |
yù zú yu4 zu2 yü tsu gokusotsu ごくそつ |
jailer (old) (1) low-ranking prison guard; (2) {Buddh} hell's tormenting devils demon jailer |
破齋 破斋 see styles |
pò zhāi po4 zhai1 p`o chai po chai hasai |
To break the monastic rule of the regulation food, or time for meals, for which the punishment is hell, or to become a hungry ghost like the kind with throats small as needles and distended bellies, or to become an animal. |
篇聚 see styles |
piān jù pian1 ju4 p`ien chü pien chü hen ju |
Two divisions of wrong-doing, one called the 五篇 five pian, the other the six and seven ju. The five pian are: (1) pārājika, v. 波, sins demanding expulsion from the order; (2) saṅghāvaśeṣa, v. 僧, sins verging on expulsion, which demand confession before and absolution by the assembly; (3) ? prāyaścitta, v. 波逸, sins deserving hell which may be forgiven; (4) pratideśanīya, v. 波羅 and 提舍, sins which must be confessed; (5) duṣkṛta, v. 突, light sins, errors, or faults. The six ju are the five above with sthūlātyaya, v. 偸, associated with the third, implying thought not developed in action. The seven ju are the above with the division of the fifth into two, action and speech. There are further divisions of eight and nine. |
胎獄 胎狱 see styles |
tāi yù tai1 yu4 t`ai yü tai yü taigoku |
胎宮 The womb prison, the womb regarded as a prison; see胎生. |
落迦 see styles |
luò jiā luo4 jia1 lo chia rakuka |
Naraka, hell, v. 那. |
見鬼 见鬼 see styles |
jiàn guǐ jian4 gui3 chien kuei |
absurd; strange; (interj.) curse it!; to hell with it! |
責苦 see styles |
semeku せめく |
torture; pains (of hell) |
那落 see styles |
nà luò na4 luo4 na lo naraku ならく |
(1) (Buddhist term) Naraka (san: naraka); hell; hades; (2) very bottom; the end; worst possible circumstances hell, purgatory |
鉄札 see styles |
tessatsu てっさつ |
(1) rectangular iron plate; (2) {Buddh} (See 金札・4,閻魔) iron tablet belonging to Yama that is inscribed with the names of souls to be sent to hell |
鐵城 铁城 see styles |
tiě chéng tie3 cheng2 t`ieh ch`eng tieh cheng tetsujō |
The iron city, hell. |
閻君 阎君 see styles |
yán jun yan2 jun1 yen chün |
(Buddhism) Yama, the King of Hell |
閻王 阎王 see styles |
yán wang yan2 wang5 yen wang enou / eno えんおう |
(Buddhism) Yama, the King of Hell; (fig.) cruel and tyrannical person (abbreviation) Yama, judge of the afterlife Yama |
閻羅 阎罗 see styles |
yán luó yan2 luo2 yen lo Enra |
(Buddhism) Yama, the King of Hell Yama |
閻老 阎老 see styles |
yán lǎo yan2 lao3 yen lao Enrō |
(Buddhism) Yama, the King of Hell Yama |
陰府 see styles |
inpu; yomi(gikun) いんぷ; よみ(gikun) |
(See 黄泉) path to the netherworld (underworld); Hades; Hell |
陰曹 阴曹 see styles |
yīn cáo yin1 cao2 yin ts`ao yin tsao |
hell; the inferno |
隨求 随求 see styles |
suí qiú sui2 qiu2 sui ch`iu sui chiu Zuigu |
According to prayer. Name of a deva who was formerly a wicked monk who died and went to hell, but when dying repented, prayed, and was reborn the deva 隨求天子 or 隨求卽得天子. Also, a bodhisattva in the Guanyin group of the Garbhadhātu, a metamorphosis of Guanyin, who sees that all prayers are answered, 隨求菩薩. |
靠北 see styles |
kào běi kao4 bei3 k`ao pei kao pei |
(lit.) to cry over one's dad's death (from Taiwanese 哭爸, Tai-lo pr. [khàu-pē]); (slang) (Tw) to rattle on; to carp; stop whining!; shut the hell up!; fuck!; damn! |
靠腰 see styles |
kào yāo kao4 yao1 k`ao yao kao yao |
(lit.) to cry from hunger (from Taiwanese 哭枵, Tai-lo pr. [khàu-iau]); (Tw) (slang) to whine; shut the hell up!; fuck!; damn! |
馬頭 马头 see styles |
mǎ tóu ma3 tou2 ma t`ou ma tou batou / bato ばとう |
horse's head; same as 碼頭|码头[ma3 tou2], pier {Buddh} (See 牛頭馬頭) horse-headed demon (in hell); (place-name, surname) Batou Horse-head. |
鬼嫁 see styles |
oniyome おによめ |
(colloquialism) (derogatory term) cruel wife; termagant wife; wife from hell |
黃泉 黄泉 see styles |
huáng quán huang2 quan2 huang ch`üan huang chüan yomiji |
the Yellow Springs; the underworld of Chinese mythology; the equivalent of Hades or Hell The yellow springs, the shades. |
黄土 see styles |
oudo / odo おうど |
(1) {geol} loess; (2) yellow ochre; yellow ocher; (3) (こうど only) (archaism) Hades; hell; underworld; world of the dead; (surname) Oudo |
黄壌 see styles |
koujou / kojo こうじょう |
(1) (See 黄土・おうど・1) yellow soil; loess; (2) (archaism) (See 黄泉・こうせん・2) Hades; hell; underworld; world of the dead |
黄泉 see styles |
yomi よみ |
(1) Hades; hell; underworld; (2) (こうせん only) (obsolete) (orig. meaning) underground spring; (female given name) Yomi |
黑繩 黑绳 see styles |
hēi shéng hei1 sheng2 hei sheng |
kālasūtra, the black-rope or black-bonds hell. |
ボコす see styles |
bokosu ボコす |
(transitive verb) (slang) (See ボコる) to beat the hell out of |
ぼこる see styles |
bokoru ぼこる |
(Godan verb with "ru" ending) (slang) to beat the hell out of |
ものか see styles |
monoka ものか |
(particle) (masculine speech) used to create a form of question indicating that the speaker actually believes the opposite is true; emphasizes a determination not to do something, e.g. "Like hell I will!" |
もんか see styles |
monka モンカ |
(particle) (masculine speech) used to create a form of question indicating that the speaker actually believes the opposite is true; emphasizes a determination not to do something, e.g. "Like hell I will!"; (personal name) Monca |
三悪趣 see styles |
sanakushu; sannakushu; sanmakushu さんあくしゅ; さんなくしゅ; さんまくしゅ |
{Buddh} (See 三悪道) the world of hungry spirits and the world of animals; three evil worlds hell |
三悪道 see styles |
sanakudou; sannakudou; sanmakudou / sanakudo; sannakudo; sanmakudo さんあくどう; さんなくどう; さんまくどう |
{Buddh} (See 三悪趣,三悪・さんあく・1) the world of hungry spirits and the world of animals; three evil worlds hell |
下三途 see styles |
xià sān tú xia4 san1 tu2 hsia san t`u hsia san tu gesanzu |
The three lower paths of the six destinations (gati) 六道, i.e. beings in hell, pretas, and animals. |
五無間 五无间 see styles |
wǔ wú jiān wu3 wu2 jian1 wu wu chien go mugen |
The uninterrupted, or no-interval hell, i. e. avīci hell, the worst, or eighth of the eight hells. It is ceaseless in five respects— karma and its effects are an endless chain with no escape; its sufferings are ceaseless; it is timeless; its fate or life is endless; it is ceaselessly full. Another interpretation takes the second, third, and fifth of the above and adds that it is packed with 罪器 implements of torture, and that it is full of all kinds of living beings. |
何なの see styles |
nannano なんなの |
(expression) (colloquialism) what's up with...?; what the hell?; what was that? |
六萬藏 六万藏 see styles |
liù wàn zàng liu4 wan4 zang4 liu wan tsang rokuman zō |
The sixty thousand verses of the Buddha-law which Devadatta could recite, an ability which did not save him from the avīci hell. |
剣の山 see styles |
kennoyama けんのやま |
(exp,n) {Buddh} mountain of swords; mountain in hell covered in swords (with their tips pointing upward); (personal name) Kennoyama |
叉地獄 see styles |
chā dì yù cha1 di4 yu4 ch`a ti yü cha ti yü |
The hell in which the sufferers are dismembered with five-pronged forks. |
嘔侯侯 呕侯侯 see styles |
ǒu hóu hóu ou3 hou2 hou2 ou hou hou ukōkō* |
Ahaha, or Hahava, the fifth of the cold hells, where the condemned neither stir nor speak, but the cold air passing through their throats produces this sound—a hell unknown to Southern Buddhism. |
嚕羅婆 噜罗婆 see styles |
lū luó pó lu1 luo2 po2 lu lo p`o lu lo po roraba |
The Raurava hell of crying and wailing. |
地獄人 地狱人 see styles |
dì yù rén di4 yu4 ren2 ti yü jen jigoku nin |
hell denizens |
地獄受 地狱受 see styles |
dì yù shòu di4 yu4 shou4 ti yü shou jigoku ju |
undergo the retribution of being born in a hell |
地獄因 地狱因 see styles |
dì yù yīn di4 yu4 yin1 ti yü yin jigoku in |
a cause of falling into hell |
地獄圖 地狱图 see styles |
dì yù tú di4 yu4 tu2 ti yü t`u ti yü tu jigoku zu |
depiction of hell |
地獄変 see styles |
jigokuhen じごくへん |
picture of Hell |
地獄業 地狱业 see styles |
dì yù yè di4 yu4 ye4 ti yü yeh jigoku gō |
hell-bent activity |
地獄界 地狱界 see styles |
dì yù jiè di4 yu4 jie4 ti yü chieh jigoku kai |
hell realms |
地獄絵 see styles |
jigokue じごくえ |
(See 地獄変) picture of Hell; painting representing Hell |
Entries with 2nd row of characters: The 2nd row is Simplified Chinese.
This page contains 100 results for "Hell" 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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