Property:Gloss-term

From Buddha-Nature

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dngos po'i gnas lugs;དངོས་པོའི་གནས་ལུགས་;abiding state of entities;abiding state of entities;Pema Karpo, in ''Clarifying the Thought of Vajradhara'' (''rDo rje 'chang gi dgongs pa gsal bar byed pa'', 16.1), a commentary on Tilopa's ''Truly Valid Words'', explains the meaning of "abiding state of entities" as follows: "Since it is the nature, or mode of abiding, of all phenomena (from forms through omniscience), it is called the "abiding state of entities."" See also Kongtrul 2005, 153–85 (where "abiding state" is translated as "authentic condition");and Kongtrul 2007b, 145–49.  +
rkang;རྐང་;"step" or "foot";"step" or "foot";pada;A step, or phase, of either the moon or the planets.  +
yang dag pa'i don;ཡང་དག་པའི་དོན་;correct reality;correct reality  +
rDo rje ldan ma;རྡོ་རྗེ་ལྡན་མ་;*Vajrāsanā  +
dngos grub kyi 'bras bu brgyad;དངོས་གྲུབ་ཀྱི་འབྲས་བུ་བརྒྱད་;eight resultant siddhis;eight resultant siddhis;The eight siddhis that are the means of obtaining the results of worldly achievements (' jig rten pa'i dngos grub kyi 'bras bu thob bar byed pa'i thabs) are the siddhi of swords (ral gri);the siddhi of eye salves (mig sman);the siddhi of pills (ril bu);the siddhi of traveling underground (sa 'og);the siddhi of swift-footedness (rkang 'gyogs);the siddhi of invisibility (mi snang ba);the siddhi of flying in the sky (mkha' la spyod pa);and rasāyana (bcud len). GTCD;and Ngo-tro Rabjampa, 369.2–3.  +
khams,dbyings;ཁམས་,དབྱིངས་;dhātu  +
mtshan nyid gsum;མཚན་ཉིད་གསུམ་;three characteristics;three characteristics;trilakṣhaṇa;Imagined, dependent, and consummate characteristics. Also known as "three natures" (rang bzhin gsum, trisvabhāva). See respective glossary entries.  +
rmen bu;རྨེན་བུ་;lymph nodes;lymph nodes  +
rang 'od;རང་འོད་;own light,reflexive light;own light,reflexive light  +
'pho chung;འཕོ་ཆུང་;"minor cycle";"minor cycle";major saṃkrānti;Equivalent to a lagna, it consists of 1,800 wind movements (breaths), or five minor saṃkrāntis, and is approximately equivalent to two hours.  +
ldan pa dang 'du ba'i 'brel ba;ལྡན་པ་དང་འདུ་བའི་འབྲེལ་བ་;relationship of conjunction and inherence;relationship of conjunction and inherence  +
Las kyi sgrol ma;ལས་ཀྱི་སྒྲོལ་མ་;*Karmatārā  +
gnas ngan len pa;གནས་ངན་ལེན་པ་;negative propensities;negative propensities;dauṣhṭhulya;This term refers to both the presence of the seeds, or causes, of the mental afflictions and the latent tendencies they create.  +
ma rig bag chags kyi sa;མ་རིག་བག་ཆགས་ཀྱི་ས་;bhūmis with the latent tendencies of ignorance;bhūmis with the latent tendencies of ignorance;The Highest Continuum teaches that bodhisattvas on the impure bhūmis (the first bhūmi through the seventh) dwell on the bhūmis with the latent tendencies of ignorance and take birth through undefiled karma. The main support for their taking rebirth is their habitual tendencies of ignorance, but that is not the impetus for taking rebirth;they take rebirth through the strength of their previous aspiration prayers and their samādhi. When bodhisattvas reach the three pure bhūmis (the eighth bhūmi through the tenth), they continue to take rebirth through undefiled karma.  +
gtsang ma'i gnas bzhi;གཙང་མའི་གནས་བཞི་;four pure states;four pure states;The last four levels of the fourth concentration of the form realm. Only noble beings are born in these levels, hence the name "pure states." The four are: Not [as] Great (Mi che ba, Avṛiha);Without Pain (Mi gdung ba, Atapa);Excellent Appearance (Gya nom snang ba, Sudṛisha) and Superior Vision (Shin tu mthong ba, Sudarshana), counted as one in this presentation;and Akaniṣhṭha ('Og min, "Highest" or "Below None"). This accords with the Kālachakra system (chapter 1, section 8), which omits Excellent Appearance. See the Stainless Light in C.T. 6:397;and Newman 1987, 493–94.  +
bdun yid;བདུན་ཡིད་;seventh mentation;seventh mentation  +
gling bzhi;གླིང་བཞི་;four continents;four continents;Videha (Lus 'phags po, "Superior Body") in the east, Jambudvīpa ('Dzam bu gling, "Rose Apple Continent") in the south, Godānīya (Ba lang spyod, "Employing Cattle") in the west, and Kuru (sGra mi snyan, "Unpleasant Sound") in the north. See Kongtrul 1995, 110–13.  +
bsnyen pa;བསྙེན་པ་;approach;approach;sevā  +
rgya ma chad;རྒྱ་མ་ཆད་;not limited;not limited  +
de bzhin nyid;དེ་བཞིན་ཉིད་;thusness;thusness;tathātā  +