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Mandarin Chinese information.
Old Wade-Giles romanization used only in Taiwan.
Japanese information.
Buddhist definition. Note: May not apply to all sects.
 Definition may be different outside of Buddhism.

There are 410 total results for your consciousness search. I have created 5 pages of results for you. Each page contains 100 results...

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Characters Pronunciation
Romanization
Simple Dictionary Definition

see styles

    yi4
i
 i
    い

More info & calligraphy:

Idea / Thought / Meaning
idea; meaning; thought; to think; wish; desire; intention; to expect; to anticipate
(1) feelings; thoughts; (2) meaning; (personal name) Kokoro
Manas, the sixth of the ṣaḍāyatanas or six means of perception, i.e. sight, hearing, smell, taste, touch, and mind. Manas means "mind (in its widest sense as applied to all the mental powers), intellect, intelligence, understanding, perception, sense, conscience, will". M.W. It is "the intellectual function of consciousness", Keith. In Chinese it connotes thought, idea, intention, meaning, will; but in Buddhist terminology its distinctive meaning is mind, or the faculty of thought.

有緣


有缘

see styles
yǒu yuán
    you3 yuan2
yu yüan
 uen

More info & calligraphy:

Karma Connection
related; brought together by fate
Those who have the cause, link, or connection, i. e. are influenced by and responsive to the Buddha.

知識


知识

see styles
zhī shi
    zhi1 shi5
chih shih
 tomoshiki
    ともしき

More info & calligraphy:

Perception of Knowledge
knowledge; CL:門|门[men2]; intellectual
knowledge; information; (surname) Tomoshiki
(1) To know and perceive, perception, knowledge. (2) A friend, an intimate. (3) The false ideas produced in the mind by common, or unenlightened knowledge; one of the 五識 in 起信論.

見性


见性

see styles
jiàn xìng
    jian4 xing4
chien hsing
 kenshou / kensho
    けんしょう

More info & calligraphy:

Kensho - Initial Enlightenment
self-awareness; consciousness of one's own character
To behold the Buddha-nature within oneself, a common saying of the Chan (Zen) or Intuitive School.

身心

see styles
shēn xīn
    shen1 xin1
shen hsin
 shinshin
    しんじん

More info & calligraphy:

Body and Mind
body and mind; mental and physical
(noun - becomes adjective with の) mind and body
Body and mind, the direct fruit of the previous life. The body is rūpa, the first skandha; mind embraces the other four, consciousness, perception, action, and knowledge; v. 五蘊.

自意識

see styles
 jiishiki / jishiki
    じいしき

More info & calligraphy:

Self Consciousness
self-consciousness

意識


意识

see styles
yì shí
    yi4 shi2
i shih
 ishiki
    いしき
consciousness; awareness; (usu. followed by 到[dao4]) to be aware of; to realize
(noun/participle) (1) consciousness; (noun/participle) (2) becoming aware (of); awareness; sense; (noun/participle) (3) {Buddh} mano-vijnana (mental consciousness, cognizer of sensory information)
manovijñāna; the faculty of mind, one of the six vijñānas.

昏迷

see styles
hūn mí
    hun1 mi2
hun mi
 konmei / konme
    こんめい
to lose consciousness; to be in a coma; stupor; coma; stunned; disoriented
(n,vs,adj-no) stupefaction; stupor; unconsciousness; confusion
delusion

see styles
jué
    jue2
chüeh
 ketsu
to faint; to lose consciousness; his; her; its; their
Third personal pronoun; demonstrative pronoun; also used instead of 倶.

see styles
hūn
    hun1
hun
 kon
muddle-headed; twilight; to faint; to lose consciousness
Dusk, dull, confused.


see styles
yùn
    yun4
yün
 osamu
    おさむ
to accumulate; to hold in store; to contain; to gather together; to collect; depth; inner strength; profundity
(given name) Osamu
skandha, v. 塞; older tr. 陰, intp. as that which covers or conceals, implying that physical and mental forms obstruct realization of the truth; while the tr. 蘊, implying an accumulation or heap, is a nearer connotation to skandha, which, originally meaning the shoulder, becomes stem, branch, combination, the objects of sense, the elements of being or mundane consciousness. The term is intp. as the five physical and mental constituents, which combine to form the intelligent 性 or nature; rūpa, the first of the five, is considered as physical, the remaining four as mental; v. 五蘊. The skandhas refer only to the phenomenal, not to the 無爲 non-phenomenal.


see styles
zhì
    zhi4
chih
 shiki
    しき
to record; to write a footnote
(1) acquaintanceship; (2) {Buddh} vijnana; consciousness; (3) (after a signature) written by...; (personal name) Tsuguhide
vijñāna, "the art of distinguishing, or perceiving, or recognizing, discerning, understanding, comprehending, distinction, intelligence, knowledge, science, learning . . . wisdom." M.W. parijñāna, "perception, thorough knowledge," etc. M.W. It is intp. by 心 the mind, mental discernment, perception, in contrast with the object discerned; also by 了別 understanding and discrimination. There are classifications of 一識 that all things are the one mind, or are metaphysical; 二識 q. v. discriminating the ālaya-vijñāna or primal undivided condition from the mano-vijñāna or that of discrimination; 三識 in the Laṅkāvatāra Sutra, fundamental, manifested and discriminate; 五識 q.v. in the 起信論, i.e. 業, 轉, 現, 知, and 相續識; 六識 the perceptions and discernings of the six organs of sense; also of 8, 9, 10, and 11 識. The most important is the eight of the 起信論, i.e. the perceptions of the six organs of sense, eye, ear, nose, tongue, body (or touch), and mind, together with manas, intp. as 意識 the consciousness of the previous moment, on which the other six depend; the eighth is the ālaya-vijñāna, v. 阿賴耶, in which is contained the seed or stock of all phenomena and which 無沒 loses none, or nothing, is indestructible; a substitute for the seventh is ādāna 'receiving' of the 唯識, which is intp. as 無解 undiscriminated, or indefinite perception; there is a difference of view between the 相 and the 性 schools in regard to the seventh and eight 識; and the latter school add a ninth called the amala, or pure vijñāna, i.e. the non-phenomenal 眞如識. The esoterics add that all phenomena are mental and all things are the one mind, hence the one mind is 無量識 unlimited mind or knowledge, every kind of knowledge, or omniscience. vijñāna is one of the twelve nidānas.; Ālaya-vijñāna and mano-vijñāna; i. e. 阿梨耶 | and 分別事 |; v. 識.

一識


一识

see styles
yī shì
    yi1 shi4
i shih
 isshiki
One sense or perception; the one individual intelligence or soul which uses the various senses, likened to a monkey which climbs in and out of the various windows of a house— a Satyasiddhi and Sautrāntika doctrine. Also, a Vairocana maṇḍala.

三識


三识

see styles
sān shì
    san1 shi4
san shih
 sanshiki
The three states of mind or consciousness: 眞識 the original unsullied consciousness or Mind, the tathāgatagarbha, the eighth or ālaya 阿賴耶識 ; 現識 mind or consciousness diversified in contact with or producing phenomena, good and evil; 分別識 consciousness discriminating and evolving the objects of the five senses. Also 意識 manas, 心識 ālaya, and 無垢識 amala, v. 識.

九地

see styles
jiǔ dì
    jiu3 di4
chiu ti
 kyuuchi / kyuchi
    きゅうち
very low land; (surname) Kuji
The nine lands, i.e. the 欲界 realm of desire or sensuous realm the four 色界 realms of form or material forms; and the four 無色界 formless realms, or realms beyond form; v. 九有, 九有情居, 禪 and 定. The nine realms are:—(1) 欲界五趣地; the desire realm with its five gati, i.e. hells, hungry ghosts, animals, men, and devas. In the four form-realms are:— (2) 離生喜樂地 Paradise after earthly life, this is also the first dhyāna, or subject of meditation, 初禪. (3) 定生喜樂地 Paradise of cessation of rebirth, 二禪. (4) 離喜妙樂地 Land of wondrous joy after the previous joys, 三禪. (5) 捨念淸淨地 The Pure Land of abandonment of thought, or recollection (of past delights), 四禪. The four formless, or infinite realms, catur arūpa dhātu, are:—(6) 空無邊處地 ākāśānantyā-yatanam, the land of infinite space; also the first samādhi, 第一定. (7) 識無邊處地 vijñānānamtyāyatanam, the land of omniscience, or infinite perception, 二定. (8) 無所有處地 ākiñcanyāyatana, the land of nothingness, 三定. (9) 非想非非想處地 naivasaṁjñānā-saṁjñāyatana, the land (of knowledge) without thinking or not thinking, or where there is neither consciousness nor unconsciousness, i.e. above either; this is the 四定. Eitel says that in the last four, "Life lasts 20,000 great kalpas in the 1st, 40,000 in the 2nd, 60,000 in the 3rd, and 80,000 great kalpas in the 4th of these heavens."

九識


九识

see styles
jiǔ shì
    jiu3 shi4
chiu shih
 kumi
    くみ
(female given name) Kumi
The kinds of cognition or consciousness (vijñāna); those of sight, hearing, smell, taste, touch, mind, mānas (or阿陁那識 ādāna), i.e. mental perception; 阿賴耶 ālāya, bodhi-consciousness, and 阿摩羅識 amala, purified or Buddha-consciousness. There is considerable difference as to the meaning of the last three.

亂識


乱识

see styles
luàn shì
    luan4 shi4
luan shih
 ranjiki
distracted consciousness

事識


事识

see styles
shì shì
    shi4 shi4
shih shih
 jishiki
phenomenal consciousness

二識


二识

see styles
èr shì
    er4 shi4
erh shih
 nishiki
    にしき
(personal name) Nishiki
two kinds of consciousness

五智

see styles
wǔ zhì
    wu3 zhi4
wu chih
 gochi
    ごち
(place-name, surname) Gochi
The five kinds of wisdom of the 眞言宗 Shingon School. Of the six elements 六大 earth, water, fire, air (or wind), ether (or space) 曇空, and consciousness (or mind 識 ), the first five form the phenomenal world, or Garbhadhātu, the womb of all things 胎藏界, the sixth is the conscious, or perceptive, or wisdom world, the Vajradhātu 金剛界, sometimes called the Diamond realm. The two realms are not originally apart, but one, and there is no consciousness without the other five elements. The sixth element, vijñāna, is further subdivided into five called the 五智 Five Wisdoms: (1) 法界體性智 dharmadhātu-prakṛti-jñāna, derived from the amala-vijñāna, or pure 識; it is the wisdom of the embodied nature of the dharmadhātu, defined as the six elements, and is associated with Vairocana 大日, in the centre, who abides in this samādhi; it also corresponds to the ether 空 element. (2) 大圓鏡智 adarśana-jñāna, the great round mirror wisdom, derived from the ālaya-vijñāna, reflecting all things; corresponds to earth, and is associated with Akṣobhya and the east. (3) 平等性智 samatā-jñāna, derived from mano-vijñāna, wisdom in regard to all things equally and universally; corresponds to fire, and is associated with Ratnasaṃbhava and the south. (4) 妙觀察智 pratyavekṣaṇa-jñāna, derived from 意識, wisdom of profound insight, or discrimination, for exposition and doubt-destruction; corresponds to water, and is associated with Amitābha and the west. (5) 成所作智 kṛtyānuṣṭhāna-jñāna, derived from the five senses, the wisdom of perfecting the double work of self-welfare and the welfare of others; corresponds to air 風 and is associated with Amoghasiddhi and the north. These five Dhyāni-Buddhas are the 五智如來. The five kinds of wisdom are the four belonging to every Buddha, of the exoteric cult, to which the esoteric cult adds the first, pure, all-refecting, universal, all-discerning, and all-perfecting.

五果

see styles
wǔ guǒ
    wu3 guo3
wu kuo
 goka
    ごか
(1) five fruits (peach, Japanese plum, apricot, jujube, Japanese chestnut); (2) (Buddhist term) five types of effect in cause-and-effect relationships; (3) (Buddhist term) five effects of ignorance and formations on one's current life
The five fruits, or effects; there are various groups, e. g. I. (1) 異熟果 fruit ripening divergently, e. g. pleasure and goodness are in different categories; present organs accord in pain or pleasure with their past good or evil deeds; (2) 等流果 fruit of the same order, e. g. goodness reborn from previous goodness; (3) 土用果 present position and function fruit, the rewards of moral merit in previous lives; (4) 增上果 superior fruit, or position arising from previous earnest endeavor and superior capacity: (5) 離繋果 fruit of freedom from all bonds, nirvana fruit. II. Fruit, or rebirth: (1) 識 conception (viewed psychologically); (2) 名色 formation mental and physical; (3) 六處 the six organs of perception complete; (4) 觸 their birth and contact with the world; (5) 受 consciousness. III. Five orders of fruit, with stones, pips, shells (as nuts), chaff-like (as pine seeds), and with pods.

五蘊


五蕴

see styles
wǔ yùn
    wu3 yun4
wu yün
 goun / gon
    ごうん
the Five Aggregates (from Sanskrit "skandha") (Buddhism)
{Buddh} the five skandhas (matter, sensation, perception, mental formations and consciousness); the five aggregates
The five skandhas, pañca-skandha: also 五陰; 五衆; 五塞犍陀 The five cumulations, substances, or aggregates, i. e. the components of an intelligent being, specially a human being: (1) 色 rūpa, form, matter, the physical form related to the five organs of sense; (2) 受 vedana, reception, sensation, feeling, the functioning of the mind or senses in connection with affairs and things; (3) 想 saṃjñā, conception, or discerning; the functioning of mind in distinguishing; (4) 行 saṃskāra, the functioning of mind in its processes regarding like and dislike, good and evil, etc.; (5) 識 vijñāna, mental faculty in regard to perception and cognition, discriminative of affairs and things. The first is said to be physical, the other four mental qualities; (2), (3), and (4) are associated with mental functioning, and therefore with 心所; (5) is associated with the faculty or nature of the mind 心王 manas. Eitel gives— form, perception, consciousness, action, knowledge. See also Keith's Buddhist Philosophy, 85-91.

五陰


五阴

see styles
wǔ yīn
    wu3 yin1
wu yin
 goon
    ごおん
(archaism) {Buddh} (See 五蘊) the five skandhas (matter, sensation, perception, mental formations and consciousness); the five aggregates
五衆 see 五蘊. 陰 is the older term.

人心

see styles
rén xīn
    ren2 xin1
jen hsin
 jinshin(p); hitogokoro
    じんしん(P); ひとごころ
popular feeling; the will of the people
(1) human nature; human heart; human spirit; kindness; sympathy; (2) (じんしん only) public feeling; people's sentiments; (3) (ひとごころ only) (See 人心地・ひとごこち・1) consciousness; awareness; (given name) Jinshin
minds of men

依識


依识

see styles
yī shì
    yi1 shi4
i shih
 eshiki
based on consciousness

僧若

see styles
sēng ruò
    seng1 ruo4
seng jo
 sōnya
sañjñā; saṃjñā, the third of the five skandhas, i.e. 想 thought, ideation, consciousness.

內識


内识

see styles
nèi shì
    nei4 shi4
nei shih
 naishiki
Internal perception, idem 心識.

八識


八识

see styles
bā shì
    ba1 shi4
pa shih
 hasshiki; hachishiki
    はっしき; はちしき
{Buddh} eight consciousnesses (one for each of the five senses, consciousness of the mind, self-consciousness and store consciousness)
The eight parijñāna, or kinds of cognition, perception, or consciousness. They are the five senses of cakṣur-vijñāna, śrotra-v., ghrāna-v., jihvā-v., and kāya-v., i.e. seeing, hearing, smelling, tasting, and touch. The sixth is mano-vijñāna, the mental sense, or intellect, v. 末那. It is defined as 意 mentality, apprehension, or by some as will. The seventh is styled kliṣṭa-mano-vijñāna 末那識 discriminated from the last as 思量 pondering, calculating; it is the discriminating and constructive sense, more than the intellectually perceptive; as infected by the ālaya-vijñāna., or receiving "seeds" from it, it is considered as the cause of all egoism and individualizing, i.e. of men and things, therefore of all illusion arising from assuming the seeming as the real. The eighth is the ālaya-vijñāna, 阿頼耶識 which is the storehouse, or basis from which come all "seeds"of consciousness. The seventh is also defined as the ādāna 阿陀那識 or "laying hold of" or "holding on to" consciousness.

六大

see styles
liù dà
    liu4 da4
liu ta
 rokudai
    ろくだい
{Buddh} the six elements (earth, water, fire, wind, void, and consciousness); (place-name) Rokudai
The six great or fundamental things, or elements — earth; water; fire; wind (or air); space (or ether); and 識 mind, or perception. These are universal and creative of all things, but the inanimate 非情 are made only of the first five, while the animate 有情 are of all six. The esoteric cult represents the six elements, somewhat differently interpreted in the garbhadhātu and vajradhātu. Also 六大界.

六通

see styles
liù tōng
    liu4 tong1
liu t`ung
    liu tung
 rokutsū
abhijñā, or ṣaḍ abhijñā. The six supernatural or universal powers acquired by a Buddha, also by an arhat through the fourth degree of dhyāna. The 'southern' Buddhists only have the first five, which are also known in China; v. 五神通; the sixth is 漏盡通 (漏盡智證通) āsravakṣaya-jñāna, supernatural consciousness of the waning of vicious propensities.

六麤


六粗

see styles
liù cū
    liu4 cu1
liu ts`u
    liu tsu
 rokuso
The six 'coarser' stages arising from the 三細 or three finer stages which in turn are produced by original 無明, the unenlightened condition of ignorance; v. Awakening of Faith 起信論. They are the states of (1) 智相 knowledge or consciousness of like and dislike arising from mental conditions; (2) 相續相 consciousness of pain and pleasure resulting from the first, causing continuous responsive memory; (3) 執取相 attachment or clinging, arising from the last; (4) 計名字相 assigning names according to the seeming and unreal with fixation of ideas); (5) 起業 the consequent activity with all the variety of deeds; (6) 業繋苦相 the suffering resulting from being tied to deeds and their karma consequences.

凡識


凡识

see styles
fán shì
    fan2 shi4
fan shih
 bonshiki
Ordinary knowledge, worldly knowledge, that of the unenlightened by Buddha.

唯心

see styles
wéi xīn
    wei2 xin1
wei hsin
 yuishin
    ゆいしん
(1) {Buddh} doctrine that all phenomena are produced from consciousness (a central teaching of the Avatamska sutra); (2) {phil} (See 唯物) spiritualism; (personal name) Yuishin
Idealism, mind only, the theory that the only reality is mental, that of the mind. Similar to 唯識q. v. and v. Lankavatara sutra.

唯識


唯识

see styles
wéi shì
    wei2 shi4
wei shih
 yuishiki
    ゆいしき
{Buddh} vijnapti-matrata (theory that all existence is subjective and nothing exists outside of the mind)
vijñānamatra(vada) cittamatra. Idealism, the doctrine that nothing exists apart from mind, 識外無法.

垢識


垢识

see styles
gòu shì
    gou4 shi4
kou shih
 kushiki
Defiling knowledge, the common worldly knowledge that does not discriminate the seeming from the real.

執識


执识

see styles
zhí shì
    zhi2 shi4
chih shih
 shūshiki
appropriating consciousness

境識


境识

see styles
jìng shì
    jing4 shi4
ching shih
 kyōshiki
objects and consciousness; object-consciousnesses

天識


天识

see styles
tiān shì
    tian1 shi4
t`ien shih
    tien shih
 tenshiki
Natural perception, or wisdom; the primal endowment in man: the 眞如 or bhūtatathatā.

妄識


妄识

see styles
wàng shì
    wang4 shi4
wang shih
 mōjiki
deluded consciousness

宅識


宅识

see styles
zhái shì
    zhai2 shi4
chai shih
 takushiki
to store consciousness

尋伺


寻伺

see styles
xún sì
    xun2 si4
hsün ssu
 jinshi
vitarka and vicāra, two conditions in dhyāna discovery and analysis of principles; vitarka 毘擔迦 a dharma which tends to increase, and vicāra 毘遮羅one which tends to diminish, definiteness and clearness in the stream of consciousness; cf. 中間定.

影像

see styles
yǐng xiàng
    ying3 xiang4
ying hsiang
 eizou / ezo
    えいぞう
image
silhouette
pratibimba. Shadows, reflections, with no real existence or nature of their own.

徳性

see styles
 tokusei / tokuse
    とくせい
moral character or consciousness

心識


心识

see styles
xīn shì
    xin1 shi4
hsin shih
 shinshiki
The mind and cognition; mind and its contents; the two are considered as identical in the Abhidharma-kośa, but different in Mahāyāna.

情有

see styles
qíng yǒu
    qing2 you3
ch`ing yu
    ching yu
 jōu
The realm of feeling, i.e. any world of sentience or feeling, especially this world as empirically considered; 有情 is to have consciousness, the conscious, or sentient.

情識


情识

see styles
qíng shì
    qing2 shi4
ch`ing shih
    ching shih
 jōshiki
deluded consciousness

意地

see styles
yì dì
    yi4 di4
i ti
 iji
    いじ
(noun - becomes adjective with の) (1) stubbornness; obstinacy; willpower; pride; (2) disposition; nature; (noun - becomes adjective with の) (3) appetite; desire; greed
The stage of intellectual consciousness, being the sixth vijñāna, the source of all concepts.

意法

see styles
yì fǎ
    yi4 fa3
i fa
 i hō
thinking consciousness and concept

意處


意处

see styles
yì chù
    yi4 chu4
i ch`u
    i chu
 i sho
The, mind-sense, the mind, the sixth of the six senses, v. 六處.

意言

see styles
yì yán
    yi4 yan2
i yen
 igon
Mental words, words within the intellectual consciousness; thought and words.

意車


意车

see styles
yì chē
    yi4 che1
i ch`e
    i che
 isha
The mind vehicle, the vehicle of intellectual consciousness, the imagination.

新熏

see styles
xīn xūn
    xin1 xun1
hsin hsün
 shingun
new perfuming of seeds in the store consciousness

昏識


昏识

see styles
hūn shì
    hun1 shi4
hun shih
 konshiki
Dull, or confused, knowledge.

有情

see styles
yǒu qíng
    you3 qing2
yu ch`ing
    yu ching
 ujou / ujo
    うじょう
to be in love; sentient beings (Buddhism)
(1) {Buddh} (See 非情・2) sentient beings; (2) (ant: 無情・1) humaneness; compassion; (personal name) Yūjun
sattva, 薩埵 in the sense of any sentient being; the term was formerly tr. 衆生 all the living, which includes the vegetable kingdom, while 有情 limits the meaning to those endowed with consciousness.

有識


有识

see styles
yǒu shì
    you3 shi4
yu shih
 yuushiki / yushiki
    ゆうしき
well-informed; learned; (personal name) Arisato
Perceptive beings, similar to 有情 sentient beings.

末那

see styles
mò nà
    mo4 na4
mo na
 mana
    まな
{Buddh} (See 末那識) manas (defiled mental consciousness, which gives rise to the perception of self)
manāḥ; manas; intp. by 意 mind, the (active) mind. Eitel says: 'The sixth of the chadâyatana, the mental faculty which constitutes man as an intelligent and moral being. ' The 末那識 is defined by the 唯識論 4 as the seventh of the 八識, namely 意, which means 思量 thinking and measuring, or calculating. It is the active mind, or activity of mind, but is also used for the mind itself.

本識


本识

see styles
běn shì
    ben3 shi4
pen shih
 honjiki
The fundamental vijñāna, one of the eighteen names of the ālaya-vijñāna, the root of all things.

梨耶

see styles
lí yé
    li2 ye2
li yeh
 riya
v. 阿 ārya.

業識


业识

see styles
yè shì
    ye4 shi4
yeh shih
 gōshiki
"Activity-consciousness in the sense that through the agency of ignorance an unenlightened mind begins to be disturbed (or awakened)." Suzuki's Awakening of Faith, 76.

欲覺


欲觉

see styles
yù jué
    yu4 jue2
yü chüeh
 yokukaku
Passion-consciousness; the consciousness of desire.

正体

see styles
 shoutai / shotai
    しょうたい
(1) true character; true form; true colors; identity; truth (of a mystery, phenomenon, etc.); origin; (2) consciousness; one's senses

殫悶


殚闷

see styles
dān mèn
    dan1 men4
tan men
to faint; to swoon; to lose consciousness

気絶

see styles
 kizetsu
    きぜつ
(n,vs,vi) faint; fainting; losing consciousness

淨識


淨识

see styles
jìng shì
    jing4 shi4
ching shih
 jōshiki
pure consciousness

混濁


混浊

see styles
hùn zhuó
    hun4 zhuo2
hun cho
 kondaku
    こんだく
turbid; muddy; dirty
(n,vs,n-pref) (1) turbidity; cloudiness (of a liquid); opacity; muddiness (e.g. water, mind, consciousness); (noun/participle) (2) disorder; chaos
to be turbid

溷濁


溷浊

see styles
hùn zhuó
    hun4 zhuo2
hun cho
 kondaku
    こんだく
variant of 混濁|混浊[hun4 zhuo2]
(n,vs,n-pref) (1) turbidity; cloudiness (of a liquid); opacity; muddiness (e.g. water, mind, consciousness); (noun/participle) (2) disorder; chaos

無識


无识

see styles
wú shì
    wu2 shi4
wu shih
 mushiki
no consciousness

現つ

see styles
 utsutsu
    うつつ
reality; consciousness

現識


现识

see styles
xiàn shì
    xian4 shi4
hsien shih
 genshiki
Direct knowledge, manifesting wisdom, another name of the ālayavijñāna, on which all things depend for realization, for it completes the knowledge of the other vijñānas. Also the 'representation-consciousness' or perception of an external world, one of the 五識 q.v. of the 起信論.

甦醒


苏醒

see styles
sū xǐng
    su1 xing3
su hsing
to come to; to awaken; to regain consciousness

用識


用识

see styles
yòng shì
    yong4 shi4
yung shih
 yūshiki
functioning consciousness

異緣


异缘

see styles
yì yuán
    yi4 yuan2
i yüan
 ien
ālambana-pratyaya, things distracting the attention, distracting thoughts; the action of external objects conditioning consciousness.

病識

see styles
 byoushiki / byoshiki
    びょうしき
consciousness or awareness of being ill

百法

see styles
bǎi fǎ
    bai3 fa3
pai fa
 hyappō
The hundred divisions of all mental qualities and their agents, of the 唯識 School; also known as the 五位百法five groups of the 100 modes or 'things': (1) 心法 the eight 識 perceptions, or forms of consciousness; (2) 心所有法 the fifty-one mental ideas; (3) 色法 the five physical organs and their six modes of sense, e. g. ear and sound; (4) 不相應行 twenty-four indefinites, or unconditioned elements; (5) 無爲 six inactive or metaphysical concepts.

眞識


眞识

see styles
zhēn shì
    zhen1 shi4
chen shih
 shinshiki
Buddha-wisdom; the original unadulterated, or innocent mind in all, which is independent of birth and death; cf. 楞伽經 and 起信論. Real knowledge free from illusion, the sixth vijñāna.

眼入

see styles
yǎn rù
    yan3 ru4
yen ju
 gennyū
The eye entrance one of the twelve entrances i.e. the basis of sight consciousness.

眼處


眼处

see styles
yǎn chù
    yan3 chu4
yen ch`u
    yen chu
 gensho
base of the visual consciousness

眼識


眼识

see styles
yǎn shì
    yan3 shi4
yen shih
 ganshiki
    がんしき
discrimination; insight
Sight-perception, the first vijñāna.

知覺


知觉

see styles
zhī jué
    zhi1 jue2
chih chüeh
 chikaku
perception; consciousness
awareness

神志

see styles
shén zhì
    shen2 zhi4
shen chih
consciousness; state of mind; compos mentis

神智

see styles
shén zhì
    shen2 zhi4
shen chih
 jinchi
mind; wisdom; consciousness
Spiritual wisdom, divine wisdom which comprehends all things, material and immaterial.

神識


神识

see styles
shén shì
    shen2 shi4
shen shih
 jinshiki
The intelligent spirit, also called 靈魂 the soul; incomprehensible or divine wisdom.

種識


种识

see styles
zhǒng shì
    zhong3 shi4
chung shih
 shushiki
The ālayavijñāna.

細識


细识

see styles
xì shì
    xi4 shi4
hsi shih
 saishiki
subtle consciousness

緣識


缘识

see styles
yuán shì
    yuan2 shi4
yüan shih
 enjiki
causal consciousness

耳識


耳识

see styles
ěr shì
    er3 shi4
erh shih
 nishiki
śrotravijñāna. Ear-perception, ear-discernment.

自覚

see styles
 jikaku
    じかく
(noun, transitive verb) self-consciousness; self-awareness; (surname) Jigaku

舌識


舌识

see styles
shé shì
    she2 shi4
she shih
 zesshiki
tongue-perception; v. 六根; 六識.

薩埵


萨埵

see styles
sà duǒ
    sa4 duo3
sa to
 satta
    さった
(1) {Buddh} sattva (sentient beings); (2) (abbreviation) {Buddh} (See 菩提薩埵) bodhisattva; (3) (abbreviation) {Buddh} (See 金剛薩埵) Vajrasattva
sattva, being, existence, essence, nature, life, sense, consciousness, substance, any living or sentient being, etc. M.W. Tr. by 情 sentient, 有情 possessing sentience, feeling, or consciousness; and by 衆生 all the living. Abbrev. for bodhisattva. Also 薩多婆; 薩怛嚩; 索埵, etc.

薰發


薰发

see styles
xūn fā
    xun1 fa1
hsün fa
 kunhotsu
the action of permeation by defiled or pure dharmas into the consciousness

藏識


藏识

see styles
zàng shì
    zang4 shi4
tsang shih
 zōshiki
The ālayavijñāna, the storehouse of all knowledge, the eighth of the vijñānas, cf. 阿 and 八.

蘊識


蕴识

see styles
yùn shì
    yun4 shi4
yün shih
 unshiki
The skandha of intelligence, or intellectuation; also intp. as 有情 consciousness, or emotion.

行識


行识

see styles
xíng shì
    xing2 shi4
hsing shih
 gyōshiki
traveling consciousness

覺悟


觉悟

see styles
jué wù
    jue2 wu4
chüeh wu
 kakugo
to come to understand; to realize; consciousness; awareness; Buddhist enlightenment (Sanskrit: cittotpāda)
To awake, become enlightened, comprehend spiritual reality.

諸識


诸识

see styles
zhū shì
    zhu1 shi4
chu shih
 shoshiki
various kinds of consciousness

識上


识上

see styles
shì shàng
    shi4 shang4
shih shang
 shikijō
on the consciousness

識住


识住

see styles
shì zhù
    shi4 zhu4
shih chu
 shikijū
That on which perception, or mind, is dependent; the four 識住are phenomenon, receptivity, cognition, and reaction; a further category of seven 識住 is divided into phenomenal and supra-phenomenal.

識同


识同

see styles
shì tóng
    shi4 tong2
shih t`ung
    shih tung
 shikidō
consciousness alike (?)

識幻


识幻

see styles
shì huàn
    shi4 huan4
shih huan
 shikigen
The illusion of perception, or mind.

識性


识性

see styles
shì xìng
    shi4 xing4
shih hsing
 shikishō
nature of consciousness

Entries with 2nd row of characters: The 2nd row is Simplified Chinese.

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This page contains 100 results for "consciousness" 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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