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<12345678>Characters | Pronunciation Romanization |
Simple Dictionary Definition |
テオリア see styles |
deoria デオリア |
contemplation (gre: theōria); speculation; (place-name) Deoria (India) |
デワース see styles |
dewaasu / dewasu デワース |
(place-name) Dewas (India) |
ドゥムカ see styles |
dodomuka ドゥムカ |
(place-name) Dumka (India) |
ナーシク see styles |
naashiku / nashiku ナーシク |
(place-name) Nasik (India) |
ネロール see styles |
nerooru ネロール |
(place-name) Nellore (India) |
ノーコン see styles |
noogon ノーゴン |
(abbreviation) {baseb} (See ノーコントロール) poor control (pitcher); no control; (place-name) Nowgong (India) |
パーシ人 see styles |
paashijin / pashijin パーシじん |
Parsi (adherent of Zoroastrianism, esp. descendants of those who fled to India to escape persecution in Persia); Parsee |
バールシ see styles |
baarushi / barushi バールシ |
(place-name) Barsi (India) |
バーンダ see styles |
baanda / banda バーンダ |
(place-name) Banda (India) |
バターラ see styles |
bataara / batara バターラ |
(place-name) Batala (India) |
ハルドイ see styles |
harudoi ハルドイ |
(place-name) Hardoi (India); Hardoy |
バルハシ see styles |
baruhaji バルハジ |
(place-name) Barhaj (India) |
パルバニ see styles |
parubani パルバニ |
(place-name) Parbhani (India) |
バルメル see styles |
barumeru バルメル |
(place-name) Barmer (India) |
バローダ see styles |
barooda バローダ |
(place-name) Baroda (India) |
ビーダル see styles |
biidaru / bidaru ビーダル |
(place-name) Bidar (India) |
ビワーニ see styles |
biwaani / biwani ビワーニ |
(place-name) Bhiwani (India) |
ブドーン see styles |
budoon ブドーン |
(place-name) Budaun (India) |
プルネア see styles |
purunea プルネア |
(place-name) Purnea (India) |
ベラール see styles |
beraaru / beraru ベラール |
(place-name) Berar (India); Berard |
ベロール see styles |
berooru ベロール |
(place-name) Vellore (India); Verrall |
ボパール see styles |
bopaaru / boparu ボパール |
(place-name) Bhopal (India) |
マールダ see styles |
maaruda / maruda マールダ |
(place-name) Malda (India) |
マールワ see styles |
maaruwa / maruwa マールワ |
(place-name) Malwa (India) |
マトゥラ see styles |
matotora マトゥラ |
(place-name) Mathura (India) |
マドラス see styles |
madorasu マドラス |
Madras; (place-name) Madras (India) |
ムソーリ see styles |
musoori ムソーリ |
(place-name) Mussoorie (India) |
ムンバイ see styles |
munbai ムンバイ |
Mumbai (India); (place-name) Mumbai (India) |
メーラト see styles |
meerato メーラト |
(place-name) Meerut (India) |
メサーナ see styles |
mesaana / mesana メサーナ |
(place-name) Mehsana (India) |
ライガル see styles |
raigaru ライガル |
(place-name) Raigarh (India) |
ライフル see styles |
raipuru ライプル |
rifle; (place-name) Raipur (India) |
ラクノー see styles |
rakunoo ラクノー |
(place-name) Lucknow (India) |
ロータク see styles |
rootaku ロータク |
(place-name) Rohtak (India) |
三国無双 see styles |
sangokubusou; sangokumusou / sangokubuso; sangokumuso さんごくぶそう; さんごくむそう |
(adj-no,n) (archaism) (See 三国一) unparalleled in Japan, China and India |
不如蜜多 see styles |
bù rú mì duō bu4 ru2 mi4 duo1 pu ju mi to Funyomitta |
The twenty-sixth patriarch, said to be Puryamitra (Eitel), son of a king in Southern India, labored in eastern India, d. A. D. 388 by samādhi. |
五大龍王 五大龙王 see styles |
wǔ dà lóng wáng wu3 da4 long2 wang2 wu ta lung wang go dai ryūō |
五類龍王 The five great dragon-kings of India. |
伊葉波羅 伊叶波罗 see styles |
yī shě bō luó yi1 she3 bo1 luo2 i she po lo Ishōhara |
Iśvara 伊溼伐羅 (1) King, sovereign; Siva and others; intp. by 自在 self-existing, independent; applied to Guanyin and other popular deities. (2) A śramaṇa of the West, learned in the Tripiṭaka, who inter alia translated A. D. 426 Samyuktābhidharma-hṛdaya-śāstra, lost since A. D. 730. (3) A bhikṣu of India, commentator on 菩提資糧論 attributed to Nāgārjuna, tr. by Dharmagupta, A. D. 590-616. |
伏駄蜜多 see styles |
fú tuó mì duō fu2 tuo2 mi4 duo1 fu t`o mi to fu to mi to Fukudamitta |
Buddhamitra, of northern India, the ninth patriarch, a vaiśya by birth (third caste), author of the 五門禪經要用法 Pancadvara-dhyāna-sutramahartha-dharma; he was styled Mahā-dhyāna-guru. |
佛陀扇多 see styles |
fó tuó shàn duō fo2 tuo2 shan4 duo1 fo t`o shan to fo to shan to Buddasenta |
Buddhaśānta, of Central India, translator of some ten works from 525-539. |
儒童菩薩 儒童菩萨 see styles |
rú tóng pú sà ru2 tong2 pu2 sa4 ju t`ung p`u sa ju tung pu sa Judō Bosatsu |
Learned-youth Bodhisattva, i.e. Confucius, he having been sent from India by the Buddha to instruct China! Also a name of Śākyamuni in a previous existence. |
加爾各答 加尔各答 see styles |
jiā ěr gè dá jia1 er3 ge4 da2 chia erh ko ta |
Calcutta (India) |
勒那摩提 see styles |
len à mó tí len4 a4 mo2 ti2 len a mo t`i len a mo ti Rokunamadai |
勒那婆提 ? Ratnamati, a monk from Central India, circa A. D. 500, who translated three works of which two remain. |
十六國王 十六国王 see styles |
shí liù guó wáng shi2 liu4 guo2 wang2 shih liu kuo wang jūroku kokuō |
十六大國 The sixteen ancient kingdoms of India whose kings are addressed in the 仁王經 2; i.e. Vaiśālī, Kośala, Śrāvastī, Magadha, Bārāṇasi, Kapilavastu, Kuśinagara, Kauśāmbī, Pañcāla, Pāṭaliputra, Mathurā, Uṣa (Uśīra), Puṇyavardhana, Devāvatāra, Kāśī, and Campā. |
南天太子 see styles |
nán tiān tài zǐ nan2 tian1 tai4 zi3 nan t`ien t`ai tzu nan tien tai tzu Nanten Taishi |
Prince of South India |
印度時報 印度时报 see styles |
yìn dù shí bào yin4 du4 shi2 bao4 yin tu shih pao |
India Times |
口力外道 see styles |
kǒu lì wài dào kou3 li4 wai4 dao4 k`ou li wai tao kou li wai tao kuriki gedō |
One of the eleven heretical sects of India. which is said to have compared the mouth to the great void out of which all things were produced. The great void produced the four elements, these produced herbs, and these in turn all the living; or more in detail the void produced wind, wind fire, fire warmth, warmth water, water congealed and formed earth which produced herbs, herbs cereals and life, hence life is food; ultimately all returns to the void, which is nirvana. |
古吉拉特 see styles |
gǔ jí lā tè gu3 ji2 la1 te4 ku chi la t`e ku chi la te |
Gujarat, state in west India |
喀拉拉邦 see styles |
kā lā lā bāng ka1 la1 la1 bang1 k`a la la pang ka la la pang |
Kerala (state in India) |
四大文明 see styles |
yondaibunmei / yondaibunme よんだいぶんめい |
(hist) the four great civilizations of the world (China, Babylon, India and Egypt; as put forward by Chinese scholar Liang Qichao in 1900) |
地婆訶羅 地婆诃罗 see styles |
dì pó hē luó di4 po2 he1 luo2 ti p`o ho lo ti po ho lo Jibakara |
Divākara, tr. as 日照 Jih-chao, a śramaṇa from Central India, A. D. 676-688, tr. of eighteen or nineteen works, introduced an alphabet of forty-two letters or characters. |
大慈恩寺 see styles |
dà cí ēn sì da4 ci2 en1 si4 ta tz`u en ssu ta tzu en ssu daijionji だいじおんじ |
Daci'en Buddhist temple in Xi'an (place-name) Daijionji The monastery of "Great Kindness and Grace", built in Changan by the crown prince of Taizong C.E. 648, where Xuanzang lived and worked and to which in 652 he added its pagoda, said to be 200 feet high, for storing the scriptures and relics he had brought from India. |
天然ゴム see styles |
tennengomu てんねんゴム |
natural rubber; India rubber; caoutchouc |
天竺九儀 天竺九仪 see styles |
tiān zhú jiǔ yí tian1 zhu2 jiu3 yi2 t`ien chu chiu i tien chu chiu i tenjiku (no) kugi |
The nine forms of etiquette of India: speaking softly, bowing the head, raising the hands high, placing hands together, bending knees, kneeling long, hands and knees touching the ground, bowing the head, lowering arms and bending knees, bringing head, arms, and knees to the ground. |
天竺五山 see styles |
tiān zhú wǔ shān tian1 zhu2 wu3 shan1 t`ien chu wu shan tien chu wu shan tenjiku (no) gosan |
The five mountains of India on which the Buddha assembled his disciples: Vaibhara, Saptaparnaguha, Indrasailaguha, Sarpiskundika-pragbhara, Grdhrakuta. |
天竺禪師 天竺禅师 see styles |
tiān zhú chán shī tian1 zhu2 chan2 shi1 t`ien chu ch`an shih tien chu chan shih Tenchiku zenji |
Meditation Master from India |
奴隷王朝 see styles |
doreiouchou / doreocho どれいおうちょう |
(hist) Slave dynasty (of India; 1206-1290); Mamluk dynasty |
婆羅門國 婆罗门国 see styles |
pó luó mén guó po2 luo2 men2 guo2 p`o lo men kuo po lo men kuo Baramon koku |
Brāhmaṇarāṣtra, the realm of the brahmans, India. |
婆舍斯多 see styles |
pó shè sī duō po2 she4 si1 duo1 p`o she ssu to po she ssu to Bashashita |
Basiasita (Sk. Vāsi-Asita) or Naśaśata, the twenty-fifth Patriarch who laboured in Central India; the date of his death is given as A.D. 325. |
孔雀王朝 see styles |
kǒng què wáng cháo kong3 que4 wang2 chao2 k`ung ch`üeh wang ch`ao kung chüeh wang chao Kushaku ōchō |
Maurya Dynasty of India (322-185 BC) Mauryan dynasty |
安得拉邦 see styles |
ān dé lā bāng an1 de2 la1 bang1 an te la pang |
Andhra Pradesh or Andhra State in southeast India |
室利羅多 室利罗多 see styles |
shì lì luó duō shi4 li4 luo2 duo1 shih li lo to Shirirata |
(or 室利邏多) Śrīlabdha, a celebrated commentator, to whom is attributed, inter alia, the chief commentary on the 起信論 Awakening of Faith; he was called the enlightener of northern India. |
帕尼巴特 see styles |
pà ní bā tè pa4 ni2 ba1 te4 p`a ni pa t`e pa ni pa te |
Panipat, ancient city in India |
師子尊者 师子尊者 see styles |
shī zǐ zūn zhě shi1 zi3 zun1 zhe3 shih tzu tsun che Shishi sonja |
師子比丘 Āryasiṃha, or Siṃha-bhikṣu. The 23rd or 24th patriarch, brahman by birth; a native of Central India; laboured in Kashmir, where he died a martyr A.D. 259. |
拘那牟尼 see styles |
jun à móu ní jun1 a4 mou2 ni2 chün a mou ni Kunamuni |
(拘含牟尼) Kanakamuni, 拘那含; 迦諾迦牟尼 q. v., lit. 金寂 the golden recluse, or 金仙 golden ṛṣi; Brahman of the Kāśyapa family, native of Śobhanavatī, second of the five Buddhas of the present Bhadra-kalpa fifth of the seven ancient Buddhas; possibly a sage who preceded Śākyamuni in India. |
拘那羅陀 拘那罗陀 see styles |
jun à luó tuó jun1 a4 luo2 tuo2 chün a lo t`o chün a lo to Kunarada |
(or拘那羅他); 拘那蘭難陀 ? Guṇarata, name of Paramārtha, who was known as 眞諦三藏, also as Kulanātha, came to China A. D. 546 from Ujjain in Western India, tr. many books, especially the treatises of Vasubandhu. |
摩訶婆羅 摩诃婆罗 see styles |
mó hē pó luó mo2 he1 po2 luo2 mo ho p`o lo mo ho po lo Makabara |
(or 摩訶娑羅) Mahāsāra. 'An ancient city in Central India, the present Masar, about 30 miles west of Patna.' Eitel. |
旁遮普邦 see styles |
páng zhē pǔ bāng pang2 zhe1 pu3 bang1 p`ang che p`u pang pang che pu pang |
Punjab state in northwest India bordering Pakistan |
日印関係 see styles |
nichiinkankei / nichinkanke にちいんかんけい |
Japan-India relations |
昌迪加爾 昌迪加尔 see styles |
chāng dí jiā ěr chang1 di2 jia1 er3 ch`ang ti chia erh chang ti chia erh |
Chandighar, capital of Punjab state of northwest India |
木叉提婆 see styles |
mù chā tí pó mu4 cha1 ti2 po2 mu ch`a t`i p`o mu cha ti po Mokusha daiba |
Mokṣadeva. A title given by the Hinayanists in India to Mahāyānadeva, i. e. 玄奘 Xuanzang.; "Mokṣa-deva", a title given to 玄奘 Xuanzang. |
末睇提舍 see styles |
mò dì tí shè mo4 di4 ti2 she4 mo ti t`i she mo ti ti she Mateidaisha |
Madhyadeśa, 中國 the central kingdom, i. e. Central India. |
東インド see styles |
higashiindo / higashindo ひがしインド |
East Indies; (place-name) East Indies (old term for India and the Malay Archipelago) |
比哈爾邦 比哈尔邦 see styles |
bǐ hā ěr bāng bi3 ha1 er3 bang1 pi ha erh pang |
Bihar, state in eastern India |
水墨山水 see styles |
suibokusansui すいぼくさんすい |
landscape painting in black India ink |
泰盧固語 泰卢固语 see styles |
tài lú gù yǔ tai4 lu2 gu4 yu3 t`ai lu ku yü tai lu ku yü |
Telugu or Telegu, the official language of Andhra Pradesh, India |
消しゴム see styles |
keshigomu けしゴム |
eraser; India rubber |
牟尼室利 see styles |
móu ní shì lì mou2 ni2 shi4 li4 mou ni shih li Munishiri |
Muniśrī, name of a monk from northern India in the Liu Song period (5th cent. ). |
眞諦三藏 眞谛三藏 see styles |
zhēn dì sān zàng zhen1 di4 san1 zang4 chen ti san tsang Shintai Sanzō |
Paramārtha 波羅末陀, also called ? Guṇarata 拘那羅陀 or Kulanātha, from Ujjain in western India, who came to China A.D. 546, and is famous as translator or editor, e.g. of the 起信論. |
祇園精舎 see styles |
gionshouja / gionshoja ぎおんしょうじゃ |
(place-name) Jetavana Monastery (India); Jetavana-vihara |
祖師西来 see styles |
soshiseirai / soshiserai そしせいらい |
{Buddh} the coming of Bodhidharma from western India to China |
科澤科德 科泽科德 see styles |
kē zé kē dé ke1 ze2 ke1 de2 k`o tse k`o te ko tse ko te |
old Chinese name for Calicut, town on Arabian sea in Kerala, India; now called 卡利卡特 |
秣羅矩吒 秣罗矩咤 see styles |
mò luó jǔ zhà mo4 luo2 ju3 zha4 mo lo chü cha Marakuta |
Malakūṭa. 'An ancient kingdom of Southern India, the coast of Malabar, about A.D. 600 a noted haunt of the Nirgrantha sect.' Eitel. |
罽膩吒王 罽腻咤王 see styles |
jì nì zhà wáng ji4 ni4 zha4 wang2 chi ni cha wang Keijita Ō |
Caṇḍa-Kaniṣka, 吒王; the Scythian king, conqueror of northern India and Central Asia, noted for violence, the seizure of Aśvaghoṣa, and, later, patronage of Buddhism. |
美音天女 see styles |
měi yīn tiān nǚ mei3 yin1 tian1 nv3 mei yin t`ien nü mei yin tien nü Bion Tennyo |
(美音); 妙音天 Sarasvatī, 薩囉薩筏底 the Muse of India, goddess of speech and learning, hence called 大辯才天, goddess of rhetoric; she is the female energy or wife of Brahmā, and also goddess of the river Sarasvatī. |
羯若鞠闍 羯若鞠阇 see styles |
jier uo jú shé jier2 uo4 ju2 she2 jier uo chü she Kanyakikuja |
Kanyakubja, 'hump-backed maidens.' An ancient city and kingdom of Central India. In antiquity this city ranks next to Ayodhyā in Oudh. It is known to classical geography as Canogyza. The etymology refers to the legend of the hundred daughters of Kuśanābha its king, who refused the licentious desires of Vāyu (Mahāvṛkṣa 大樹仙) and were turned by him into hunchbacks. M.W. Eitel says 'the modem Canouge'. |
至那僕底 see styles |
zhì nà pū dǐ zhi4 na4 pu1 di3 chih na p`u ti chih na pu ti |
Cīnapati, Lord (from) China, said in the Record of Western Lands 西域記 to have been appointed by the Han rulers; a country so-called because the son of 蕃維質 Fan Weizhi of 河西 Hexi dwelt (and reigned) there. Eitel says, 'A small kingdom in the north-west of India (near Lahore) the inhabitants of which asserted (A. D. 640) that their first kings had come from China.' |
般刺蜜帝 see styles |
pán cì mì dì pan2 ci4 mi4 di4 p`an tz`u mi ti pan tzu mi ti Hanramittai |
Pramiti, Paramiti, a monk from Central India, tr. the Śūrangama Sutra 首楞嚴經 A.D. 705. |
般若多羅 般若多罗 see styles |
bō rě duō luó bo1 re3 duo1 luo2 po je to lo Hannyatara |
Prajñātāra. The 27th patriarch, native of eastern India, who laboured in southern India and consumed himself 'by the fire of transformation,' A.D. 457, teacher of Bodhidharma. |
般若毱多 see styles |
bō rě jú duō bo1 re3 ju2 duo1 po je chü to Hannyakikuta |
Prajñāgupta. A Hīnayāna monk of southern India, who wrote against the Mahāyāna. |
茶馬互市 茶马互市 see styles |
chá mǎ hù shì cha2 ma3 hu4 shi4 ch`a ma hu shih cha ma hu shih |
old tea-horse market between Tibet, China, Southeast Asia and India, formalized as a state enterprise under the Song dynasty |
茶馬古道 茶马古道 see styles |
chá mǎ gǔ dào cha2 ma3 gu3 dao4 ch`a ma ku tao cha ma ku tao |
old tea-horse road or southern Silk Road, dating back to 6th century, from Tibet and Sichuan through Yunnan and Southeast Asia, reaching to Bhutan, Sikkim, India and beyond |
菩提流志 see styles |
pú tí liú zhì pu2 ti2 liu2 zhi4 p`u t`i liu chih pu ti liu chih Bojirushi |
Bodhiruci, intp. as 覺愛, a monk from southern India whose original name 達磨流支 Dharmaruci was changed as above by order of the Empress Wu; he tr. 53 works in A.D. 693—713. |
菩提流支 see styles |
pú tí liú zhī pu2 ti2 liu2 zhi1 p`u t`i liu chih pu ti liu chih Bodairushi |
Bodhiruci, intp. as 道希, a monk from northern India who arrived at Loyang in A.D. 508 and tr. some 30 works; also 菩提留支, 菩提鶻露支. |
西インド see styles |
nishiindo / nishindo にしインド |
(1) (abbreviation) (See 西インド諸島) West Indies; (2) Western India |
設多圖盧 设多图卢 see styles |
shè duō tú lú she4 duo1 tu2 lu2 she to t`u lu she to tu lu Setsutazuro |
Satadru, 'an ancient kingdom of northern India, noted for its mineral wealth. Exact position unknown.' Eitel. Also, the River Sutlej. |
訶梨跋摩 诃梨跋摩 see styles |
hē lí bá mó he1 li2 ba2 mo2 ho li pa mo Karihatsuma |
Harivarman, tawny armour, and 師子鎧 lion armour; a Brahman who '900 years' after the Nirvāṇa, appeared in Central India and joined the Sarvāstivādin and Satyasiddhi school by the publication of the Satyasiddhi śāstra (tr. as the 成實論 by Kumārajīva, 407-418). |
貝多羅葉 see styles |
baitarayou; baitaraba / baitarayo; baitaraba ばいたらよう; ばいたらば |
pattra (palmyra leaves used in Ancient India for writing upon) |
跋羅縷支 跋罗缕支 see styles |
bá luó lǚ zhī ba2 luo2 lv3 zhi1 pa lo lü chih Bararushi |
Bhadraruci, a monk of west India, of great subtlety and reasoning power; he opposed an arrogant Brahman, who, defeated, sank alive into hell. |
迦毘羅衛 see styles |
kabirae かびらえ |
(place-name) Kapilavastu (India) |
Entries with 2nd row of characters: The 2nd row is Simplified Chinese.
This page contains 100 results for "India" 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.
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.
The following titles are just to help people who are searching for an Asian dictionary to find this page.