Glossary
Types of attestation for names and terms of the corresponding source language
This term is attested in a manuscript used as a source for this translation.
This term is attested in other manuscripts with a parallel or similar context.
This term is attested in dictionaries matching Tibetan to the corresponding language.
The attestation of this name is approximate. It is based on other names where the relationship between the Tibetan and source language is attested in dictionaries or other manuscripts.
This term is a reconstruction based on the Tibetan phonetic rendering of the term.
This term is a reconstruction based on the semantics of the Tibetan translation.
This term has been supplied from an unspecified source, which most often is a widely trusted dictionary.
g.1
Ānanda
Wylie: kun dga’ bo
Tibetan: ཀུན་དགའ་བོ།
Sanskrit: ānanda
A major śrāvaka disciple and personal attendant of the Buddha Śākyamuni during the last twenty-five years of his life. He was a cousin of the Buddha (according to the Mahāvastu, he was a son of Śuklodana, one of the brothers of King Śuddhodana, which means he was a brother of Devadatta; other sources say he was a son of Amṛtodana, another brother of King Śuddhodana, which means he would have been a brother of Aniruddha).Ānanda, having always been in the Buddha’s presence, is said to have memorized all the teachings he heard and is celebrated for having recited all the Buddha’s teachings by memory at the first council of the Buddhist saṅgha, thus preserving the teachings after the Buddha’s parinirvāṇa. The phrase “Thus did I hear at one time,” found at the beginning of the sūtras, usually stands for his recitation of the teachings. He became a patriarch after the passing of Mahākāśyapa.
g.2
bali
Wylie: gtor ma
Tibetan: གཏོར་མ།
Sanskrit: bali
A food offering made to a deity or spirits; such an offering may be varied and elaborate, or may be simple uncooked food.
g.3
Banyan Grove
Wylie: nya gro dha’i kun dga’ ra ba
Tibetan: ཉ་གྲོ་དྷའི་ཀུན་དགའ་ར་བ།
Sanskrit: nyagrodhārāma
A grove of banyan trees (Skt. nyagrodha) near Kapilavastu where the Buddha sometimes took residence. It was a gift to the Buddhist community by King Śuddhodana, the father of the Buddha.
g.4
bhūta
Wylie: ’byung po
Tibetan: འབྱུང་པོ།
Sanskrit: bhūta
This term in its broadest sense can refer to any being, whether human, animal, or nonhuman. However, it is often used to refer to a specific class of nonhuman beings, especially when bhūtas are mentioned alongside rākṣasas, piśācas, or pretas. In common with these other kinds of nonhumans, bhūtas are usually depicted with unattractive and misshapen bodies. Like several other classes of nonhuman beings, bhūtas take spontaneous birth. As their leader is traditionally regarded to be Rudra-Śiva (also known by the name Bhūta), with whom they haunt dangerous and wild places, bhūtas are especially prominent in Śaivism, where large sections of certain tantras concentrate on them.
g.5
billions
Wylie: bye ba khrag khrig phrag ’bum
Tibetan: བྱེ་བ་ཁྲག་ཁྲིག་ཕྲག་འབུམ།
Sanskrit: koṭiniyutaśatasahasra
The number of grains of sand of the river Ganges is a favored analogy for immense numbers in the sūtras. Literally 10 million x 100 million x 100 thousand; i.e., 1019 or 10 quintillion.
g.6
blessed one
Wylie: bcom ldan ’das
Tibetan: བཅོམ་ལྡན་འདས།
Sanskrit: bhagavat
In Buddhist literature, this is an epithet applied to buddhas, most often to Śākyamuni. The Sanskrit term generally means “possessing fortune,” but in specifically Buddhist contexts it implies that a buddha is in possession of six auspicious qualities (bhaga) associated with complete awakening. The Tibetan term—where bcom is said to refer to “subduing” the four māras, ldan to “possessing” the great qualities of buddhahood, and ’das to “going beyond” saṃsāra and nirvāṇa—possibly reflects the commentarial tradition where the Sanskrit bhagavat is interpreted, in addition, as “one who destroys the four māras.” This is achieved either by reading bhagavat as bhagnavat (“one who broke”), or by tracing the word bhaga to the root √bhañj (“to break”).
g.7
bodhisattva
Wylie: byang chub sems dpa’
Tibetan: བྱང་ཆུབ་སེམས་དཔའ།
Sanskrit: bodhisattva
A being who is dedicated to the cultivation and fulfilment of the altruistic intention to attain perfect buddhahood, traversing the ten bodhisattva levels (daśabhūmi, sa bcu). Bodhisattvas purposely opt to remain within cyclic existence in order to liberate all sentient beings, instead of simply seeking personal freedom from suffering. In terms of the view, they realize both the selflessness of persons and the selflessness of phenomena.
g.8
brahmarṣis
Wylie: bram ze’i drang srong
Tibetan: བྲམ་ཟེའི་དྲང་སྲོང་།
Sanskrit: brahmarṣi
See brahmin ascetics.
g.9
brahmin
Wylie: bram ze
Tibetan: བྲམ་ཟེ།
Sanskrit: brāhmaṇa
A member of the highest of the four castes in Indian society, which is closely associated with religious vocations.
g.10
brahmin ascetics
Wylie: bram ze’i drang srong
Tibetan: བྲམ་ཟེའི་དྲང་སྲོང་།
Sanskrit: brahmarṣi
Indian ascetic, sage, or hermit belonging to brahmin priestly class.
g.11
buddhafield
Wylie: sangs rgyas kyi zhing
Tibetan: སངས་རྒྱས་ཀྱི་ཞིང་།
Sanskrit: buddhakṣetra
A pure realm manifested by a buddha in which beings may follow the path to awakening without fear of falling into lower realms.
g.12
dhāraṇī
Wylie: gzungs
Tibetan: གཟུངས།
Sanskrit: dhāraṇī
The term dhāraṇī has the sense of something that “holds” or “retains,” and so it can refer to the special capacity of practitioners to memorize and recall detailed teachings. It can also refer to a verbal expression of the teachings—an incantation, spell, or mnemonic formula—that distills and “holds” essential points of the Dharma and is used by practitioners to attain mundane and supramundane goals. The same term is also used to denote texts that contain such formulas.
g.13
female preta
Wylie: yi dags mo
Tibetan: ཡི་དགས་མོ།
Sanskrit: *pretikā
The feminine form of preta.
g.14
Flaming Mouth
Wylie: kha ’bar ma
Tibetan: ཁ་འབར་མ།
Sanskrit: jvālāmukhī RS
The epithet of the female preta (or pretikā) who disturbs Ānanda, demanding to be fed. In Tibetan dictionaries, the female preta known as Flaming Mouth is sometimes described as “a queen of pretas” ( yi dwags kyi rgyal mo zhig), though this status is not made explicit in this text. Sometimes rendered by scholars as Jvālāmukhī. Rendered in Chinese (Taishō 1314) as Mianran 面燃 “Burning Face.”
g.15
Ganges
Wylie: gang gA’i klung
Tibetan: གང་གཱའི་ཀླུང་།
Sanskrit: gaṅgā
The Gaṅgā, or Ganges in English, is considered to be the most sacred river of India, particularly within the Hindu tradition. It starts in the Himalayas, flows through the northern plains of India, bathing the holy city of Vārāṇasī, and meets the sea at the Bay of Bengal, in Bangladesh. In the sūtras, however, this river is mostly mentioned not for its sacredness but for its abundant sands—noticeable still today on its many sandy banks and at its delta—which serve as a common metaphor for infinitely large numbers.According to Buddhist cosmology, as explained in the Abhidharmakośa, it is one of the four rivers that flow from Lake Anavatapta and cross the southern continent of Jambudvīpa—the known human world or more specifically the Indian subcontinent.
g.16
graha
Wylie: gdon
Tibetan: གདོན།
Sanskrit: graha
A type of spirit that can exert a harmful influence on the human body and mind. Grahas are closely associated with the planets and other astronomical bodies.
g.17
Kapilavastu
Wylie: yul ser skya
Tibetan: ཡུལ་སེར་སྐྱ།
Sanskrit: kapilavastu
The Śākya capital, where Siddhārtha Gautama was raised.
g.18
kumbhāṇḍa
Wylie: grul bum
Tibetan: གྲུལ་བུམ།
Sanskrit: kumbhāṇḍa
A class of dwarf beings subordinate to Virūḍhaka, one of the Four Great Kings, associated with the southern direction. The name uses a play on the word aṇḍa, which means “egg” but is also a euphemism for a testicle. Thus, they are often depicted as having testicles as big as pots (from kumbha, or “pot”).
g.19
lay devotee
Wylie: dge bsnyen, dge bsnyen ma
Tibetan: དགེ་བསྙེན།, དགེ་བསྙེན་མ།
Sanskrit: upāsaka, upāsikā
A male (upāsaka) or female (upāsikā) practitioner who has taken vows to uphold the five precepts.
g.20
Lokeśvara
Wylie: ’jig rten dbang phyug
Tibetan: འཇིག་རྟེན་དབང་ཕྱུག
Sanskrit: lokeśvara
“Lord of the World,” protector of the world. Here an epithet of bodhisattva Avalokiteśvara.
g.21
Lokeśvaraprabha
Wylie: ’jig rten dbang phyug ’od
Tibetan: འཇིག་རྟེན་དབང་ཕྱུག་འོད།
Sanskrit: lokeśvaraprabha
Name of the tathāgata who gave the dhāraṇī to the Buddha during a previous life as a brahmin.
g.22
Magadhan bushel
Wylie: ma ga dha’i bre bo
Tibetan: མ་ག་དྷའི་བྲེ་བོ།
A unit of measurement for food and drink in the kingdom of Magadha, made using a container or bushel (Tib. bre bo) of a specific size.
g.23
method
Wylie: thabs
Tibetan: ཐབས།
Sanskrit: upāya
Method or skillful means. In the context of this text, a method for quelling the suffering of pretas.
g.24
monk
Wylie: dge slong
Tibetan: དགེ་སློང་།
Sanskrit: bhikṣu
The term bhikṣu, often translated as “monk,” refers to the highest among the eight types of prātimokṣa vows that make one part of the Buddhist assembly. The Sanskrit term literally means “beggar” or “mendicant,” referring to the fact that Buddhist monks and nuns—like other ascetics of the time—subsisted on alms (bhikṣā) begged from the laity. In the Tibetan tradition, which follows the Mūlasarvāstivāda Vinaya, a monk follows 253 rules as part of his moral discipline. A nun (bhikṣuṇī; dge slong ma) follows 364 rules. A novice monk (śrāmaṇera; dge tshul) or nun (śrāmaṇerikā; dge tshul ma) follows thirty-six rules of moral discipline (although in other vinaya traditions novices typically follow only ten).
g.25
Nanda
Wylie: dga’ bo
Tibetan: དགའ་བོ།
Sanskrit: nanda
The Buddha’s younger half-brother; his mother was Mahāprajāpatī Gautamī, the Buddha’s maternal aunt. He became an important śrāvaka disciple.
g.26
nun
Wylie: dge slong ma
Tibetan: དགེ་སློང་མ།
Sanskrit: bhikṣuṇī
The term bhikṣuṇī, often translated as “nun,” refers to the highest among the eight types of prātimokṣa vows that make one part of the Buddhist assembly. The Sanskrit term bhikṣu (to which the female grammatical ending ṇī is added) literally means “beggar” or “mendicant,” referring to the fact that Buddhist nuns and monks—like other ascetics of the time—subsisted on alms (bhikṣā) begged from the laity. In the Tibetan tradition, which follows the Mūlasarvāstivāda Vinaya, a bhikṣuṇī follows 364 rules and a bhikṣu follows 253 rules as part of their moral discipline.For the first few years of the Buddha’s teachings in India, there was no ordination for women. It started at the persistent request and display of determination of Mahāprajāpatī, the Buddha’s stepmother and aunt, together with five hundred former wives of men of Kapilavastu, who had themselves become monks. Mahāprajāpatī is thus considered to be the founder of the nun’s order.
g.27
offering ritual
Wylie: gtor ma’i cho ga
Tibetan: གཏོར་མའི་ཆོ་ག
Sanskrit: balividhi
Food offering or oblation ritual.
g.28
offering water
Wylie: mchod yon
Tibetan: མཆོད་ཡོན།
Sanskrit: argha
Drinking water, offering water, offering, gift. Also remuneration to a priest for performing a religious service.
g.29
piśāca
Wylie: sha za
Tibetan: ཤ་ཟ།
Sanskrit: piśāca
A class of nonhuman beings that, like several other classes of nonhuman beings, take spontaneous birth. Ranking below rākṣasas, they are less powerful and more akin to pretas. They are said to dwell in impure and perilous places, where they feed on impure things, including flesh. This could account for the name piśāca, which possibly derives from √piś, to carve or chop meat, as reflected also in the Tibetan sha za, “meat eater.” They are often described as having an unpleasant appearance, and at times they appear with animal bodies. Some possess the ability to enter the dead bodies of humans, thereby becoming so-called vetāla, to touch whom is fatal.
g.30
preta
Wylie: yi dags
Tibetan: ཡི་དགས།
Sanskrit: preta
One of the five or six classes of sentient beings, into which beings are born as the karmic fruition of past miserliness. As the term in Sanskrit means “the departed,” they are analogous to the ancestral spirits of Vedic tradition, the pitṛs, who starve without the offerings of descendants. It is also commonly translated as “hungry ghost” or “starving spirit,” as in the Chinese 餓鬼 e gui.They are sometimes said to reside in the realm of Yama, but are also frequently described as roaming charnel grounds and other inhospitable or frightening places along with piśācas and other such beings. They are particularly known to suffer from great hunger and thirst and the inability to acquire sustenance.
g.31
rākṣasa
Wylie: srin po
Tibetan: སྲིན་པོ།
Sanskrit: rākṣasa
A class of nonhuman beings that are often, but certainly not always, considered demonic in the Buddhist tradition. They are often depicted as flesh-eating monsters who haunt frightening places and are ugly and evil-natured with a yearning for human flesh, and who additionally have miraculous powers, such as being able to change their appearance.
g.32
religious life
Wylie: tshangs pa lha’i spyod pa
Tibetan: ཚངས་པ་ལྷའི་སྤྱོད་པ།
Sanskrit: brahmacārya
The expression brahmacārya (tshangs pa lha ’ i spyod pa) encompasses a wide range of activities including moral restraint in general (including celibacy, refraining from killing and harming beings, etc.), devotion to studies and religious practices, as well as the simplification of one’s lifestyle in regard to food, lodging, and so forth.
g.33
root of virtue
Wylie: dge ba’i rtsa ba
Tibetan: དགེ་བའི་རྩ་བ།
Sanskrit: kuśalamūla
Fundamental positive qualities, good and virtuous deeds committed in the present or in former lives that bring good karma.
g.34
Three Jewels
Wylie: dkon mchog gsum
Tibetan: དཀོན་མཆོག་གསུམ།
Sanskrit: triratna
The Buddha, Dharma, and Saṅgha—the three objects of Buddhist refuge. In the Tibetan rendering, “the three rare and supreme ones.”
g.35
thus-gone one
Wylie: de bzhin gshegs pa
Tibetan: དེ་བཞིན་གཤེགས་པ།
Sanskrit: tathāgata
A frequently used synonym for buddha. According to different explanations, it can be read as tathā-gata, literally meaning “one who has thus gone,” or as tathā-āgata, “one who has thus come.” Gata, though literally meaning “gone,” is a past passive participle used to describe a state or condition of existence. Tatha(tā), often rendered as “suchness” or “thusness,” is the quality or condition of things as they really are, which cannot be conveyed in conceptual, dualistic terms. Therefore, this epithet is interpreted in different ways, but in general it implies one who has departed in the wake of the buddhas of the past, or one who has manifested the supreme awakening dependent on the reality that does not abide in the two extremes of existence and quiescence. It is also often used as a specific epithet of the Buddha Śākyamuni.
g.36
well-gone one
Wylie: bde bar gshegs pa
Tibetan: བདེ་བར་གཤེགས་པ།
Sanskrit: sugata
One of the standard epithets of the buddhas. A recurrent explanation offers three different meanings for su- that are meant to show the special qualities of “accomplishment of one’s own purpose” (svārthasampad) for a complete buddha. Thus, the Sugata is “well” gone, as in the expression su-rūpa (“having a good form”); he is gone “in a way that he shall not come back,” as in the expression su-naṣṭa-jvara (“a fever that has utterly gone”); and he has gone “without any remainder” as in the expression su-pūrṇa-ghaṭa (“a pot that is completely full”). According to Buddhaghoṣa, the term means that the way the Buddha went (Skt. gata) is good (Skt. su) and where he went (Skt. gata) is good (Skt. su).
g.37
yakṣa
Wylie: gnod sbyin
Tibetan: གནོད་སྦྱིན།
Sanskrit: yakṣa
A class of nonhuman beings who inhabit forests, mountainous areas, and other natural spaces, or serve as guardians of villages and towns, and may be propitiated for health, wealth, protection, and other boons, or controlled through magic. According to tradition, their homeland is in the north, where they live under the rule of the Great King Vaiśravaṇa. Several members of this class have been deified as gods of wealth (these include the just-mentioned Vaiśravaṇa) or as bodhisattva generals of yakṣa armies, and have entered the Buddhist pantheon in a variety of forms, including, in tantric Buddhism, those of wrathful deities.