There are 42 total results for your A Taoist search.
Characters | Pronunciation Romanization |
Simple Dictionary Definition |
白虎 see styles |
bái hǔ bai2 hu3 pai hu byakko びゃっこ |
More info & calligraphy: White Tiger(1) (See 四神) White Tiger (Taoist god said to rule over the western heavens); (2) {astron} (See 二十八宿) seven mansions (Chinese constellations) of the western heavens; (given name) Byakko |
道場 道场 see styles |
dào chǎng dao4 chang3 tao ch`ang tao chang michiba みちば |
More info & calligraphy: Dojo / Martial Arts Studio(1) dojo; hall used for martial arts training; (2) (abbreviation) {Buddh} (See 菩提道場) manda (place of Buddhist practice or meditation, esp. the place under the bodhi tree where Buddha attained enlightenment); (surname) Michiba Truth-plot. bodhimaṇḍala, circle, or place of enlightenment. The place where Buddha attained enlightenment. A place, or method, for attaining to Buddha-truth. An object of or place for religious offerings. A place for teaching, learning, or practising religion. |
道士 see styles |
dào shì dao4 shi4 tao shih michishi みちし |
More info & calligraphy: Taoist / Daoist(1) Taoist; (2) person of high morals; (3) Buddhist monk; (4) immortal mountain wizard; Taoist immortal; (personal name) Michishi A Taoist (hermit), also applied to Buddhists, and to Śākyamuni. |
五斗米道 see styles |
wǔ dǒu mǐ dào wu3 dou3 mi3 dao4 wu tou mi tao gotobeidou / gotobedo ごとべいどう |
More info & calligraphy: The Way of Five Pecks of Rice(hist) (See 天師道) Way of the Five Pecks of Rice (ancient Chinese Daoist movement later known as The Way of the Celestial Masters) |
籙 箓 see styles |
lù lu4 lu |
record book; archive; Taoist written charm; document of prophecy attesting to dynastic fortunes |
藏 see styles |
zàng zang4 tsang kura くら |
storehouse; depository; Buddhist or Taoist scripture (surname) Kura Treasury, thesaurus, store, to hide; the Canon. An intp. of piṭaka, a basket, box, granary, collection of writings. The 二藏 twofold canon may be the sutras and the vinaya; or the Hīnayāna and Mahāyāna scriptures. The 三藏 or tripiṭaka consists of the sutras, vinaya, and śāstras (abhidharma). The 四藏 fourfold canon adds a miscellaneous collection. The 五藏 fivefold collection is sutras, vinaya, abhidharma, miscellaneous, and spells, or, instead of the spells, a bodhisattva collection. There is also an esoteric fivefold canon, the first three being the above, the last two being the prājñāpāramitā and the dhāraṇīs. |
觀 观 see styles |
guàn guan4 kuan kan |
Taoist monastery; palace gate watchtower; platform vipaśyanā; vidarśanā. To look into, study, examine, contemplate; contemplation, insight; a study, a Taoist monastery; to consider illusion and discern illusion, or discern the seeming from the real; to contemplate and mentally enter into truth. 覺 is defined as awakening, or awareness, 觀 as examination or study. It is also an old tr. of the word Yoga; and cf. 禪 17. Guan is especially a doctrine of the Tiantai school as shown in the 止觀 q.v. |
內丹 内丹 see styles |
nèi dān nei4 dan1 nei tan |
Taoist internal alchemy |
募化 see styles |
mù huà mu4 hua4 mu hua boke |
(of a Buddhist monk or Taoist priest) to collect alms to collect alms |
四神 see styles |
shijin しじん |
(See 青竜・2,白虎・1,朱雀・1,玄武・1) four Taoist gods said to reign over the four directions; four gods said to reign over the four seasons |
城隍 see styles |
chéng huáng cheng2 huang2 ch`eng huang cheng huang joukou / joko じょうこう |
Shing Wong (deity in Chinese mythology) (1) (rare) castle and moat; castle's moat; (2) City God (Taoist guardian god of a city) |
外丹 see styles |
wài dān wai4 dan1 wai tan |
Taoist external alchemy |
宮觀 宫观 see styles |
gōng guàn gong1 guan4 kung kuan |
Taoist temple |
導引 导引 see styles |
dǎo yǐn dao3 yin3 tao yin douin / doin どういん |
same as 引導|引导[yin3 dao3]; Dao Yin, Daoist exercises involving breathing, stretching and self-massage (1) guidance; showing the way; (2) (See あん摩・あんま・1) massage; (3) tao yin; Taoist Neigong; Taoist exercises To lead. |
度牒 see styles |
dù dié du4 die2 tu tieh dochō |
Buddhist or Taoist ordination certificate issued by government ordination licensing |
戒牒 see styles |
jiè dié jie4 die2 chieh tieh kaichō |
Buddhist or Taoist ordination certificate issued by monastic authorities A monk' s certificate, useful to a wandering or travelling monk.; 戒驗; 度牒 Certificate of ordination of a monk. |
房術 see styles |
boujutsu / bojutsu ぼうじゅつ |
(abbreviation) (See 房中術) Taoist sexual alchemy (supposed to prolong the practitioner's life) |
清談 清谈 see styles |
qīng tán qing1 tan2 ch`ing t`an ching tan seidan / sedan せいだん |
light intellectual conversation (1) (hist) Qingtan (Taoist-related movement in ancient China); (noun/participle) (2) noble, refined, eloquent speech |
真經 真经 see styles |
zhēn jīng zhen1 jing1 chen ching |
sutra; Taoist treatise |
神仙 see styles |
shén xiān shen2 xian1 shen hsien shinsen しんせん |
Daoist immortal; supernatural entity; (in modern fiction) fairy, elf, leprechaun etc; fig. lighthearted person (1) immortal mountain wizard (in Taoism); Taoist immortal; supernatural being; (2) (in Japan) 11th note of the ancient chromatic scale (approx. C) 神僊 The genī, immortals, ṛṣi, of whom the five kinds are 天, 神, 人, 地, and 鬼仙, i.e. deva, spirit, human, earth (or cave), and preta immortals. |
神僊 see styles |
shén xiān shen2 xian1 shen hsien shinsen しんせん |
(1) immortal mountain wizard (in Taoism); Taoist immortal; supernatural being; (2) (in Japan) 11th note of the ancient chromatic scale (approx. C) immortals |
符籙 符箓 see styles |
fú lù fu2 lu4 fu lu furoku ふろく |
(Taoism) talisman in the form of a painting of symbols thought to have magical powers fulu; protective talisman used historically by Taoist pilgrims in China |
荘子 see styles |
souji / soji そうじ |
(surname, female given name) Souji; (wk) Zhuangzi (Taoist classic) |
貧道 贫道 see styles |
pín dào pin2 dao4 p`in tao pin tao hindou / hindo ひんどう |
poor Taoist (1) {Buddh} imperfect (Buddhist) training; imperfection in one's (Buddhist) training; incomplete training; poor training; (pronoun) (2) (humble language) (used by Buddhist monks) I; me The way of poverty, that of the monk and nun; also, a poor religion, i.e. without the Buddha-truth. |
道人 see styles |
dào rén dao4 ren2 tao jen michihito みちひと |
Taoist devotee (honorific) (given name) Michihito One who has entered the way, one who seeks enlightenment, a general name for early Buddhists and also for Taoists. |
道家 see styles |
dào jiā dao4 jia1 tao chia michiya みちや |
Daoist School of the Warring States Period (475-221 BC), based on the teachings of Laozi or Lao-tze 老子[Lao3 zi3] (c. 500 BC-) and Zhuangzi 莊子|庄子[Zhuang1 zi3] (369-286 BC) Taoist; (surname) Michiya A Daoist |
道蔵 see styles |
douzou / dozo どうぞう |
Dao Zang; Taoist canon |
道袍 see styles |
dào páo dao4 pao2 tao p`ao tao pao |
Taoist robe; traditional men's gown |
道観 see styles |
doukan / dokan どうかん |
Taoist temple |
道長 道长 see styles |
dào zhǎng dao4 zhang3 tao chang michinaga みちなが |
Taoist priest; Daoist priest head of a martial arts organization (organisation); (surname) Michinaga |
金仙 see styles |
jīn xiān jin1 xian1 chin hsien konsen こんせん |
(surname) Konsen Golden ṛṣi, or immortal, i.e. Buddha; also Taoist genī. |
麻姑 see styles |
mako; mago まこ; まご |
(1) Ma Gu; legendary Taoist immortal with long talon-like fingernails; (2) (See 孫の手) backscratcher |
南無師 南无师 see styles |
nán wú shī nan2 wu2 shi1 nan wu shih namu shi |
Masters of namaḥ, i.e. Buddhist or Taoist priests and sorcerers. |
庚申會 庚申会 see styles |
gēng shēn huì geng1 shen1 hui4 keng shen hui kōshin e |
An assembly for offerings on the night of Keng-shen to an image in the form of a monkey, which is the shen symbolical animal; a Taoist rite adopted by Buddhism. |
房中術 see styles |
bouchuujutsu / bochujutsu ぼうちゅうじゅつ |
Taoist sexual alchemy (supposed to prolong the practitioner's life) |
指南宮 指南宫 see styles |
zhǐ nán gōng zhi3 nan2 gong1 chih nan kung |
Zhinan Temple, Taoist temple in the hills of Muzha 木柵|木栅[Mu4 zha4], Taipei |
盂蘭盆 盂兰盆 see styles |
yú lán pén yu2 lan2 pen2 yü lan p`en yü lan pen urabon うらぼん |
see 盂蘭盆會|盂兰盆会[Yu2 lan2 pen2 hui4] Bon festival (Buddhist ceremony held around July 15); Feast of Lanterns (盂蘭); 鳥藍婆 (鳥藍婆拏) ullambana 盂蘭 may be another form of lambana or avalamba, "hanging down," "depending," "support"; it is intp. "to hang upside down", or "to be in suspense", referring to extreme suffering in purgatory; but there is a suggestion of the dependence of the dead on the living. By some 盆 is regarded as a Chinese word, not part of the transliteration, meaning a vessel filled with offerings of food. The term is applied to the festival of All Souls, held about the 15th of the 7th moon, when masses are read by Buddhist and Taoist priests and elaborate offerings made to the Buddhist Trinity for the purpose of releasing from purgatory the souls of those who have died on land or sea. The Ullambanapātra Sutra is attributed to Śākyamuni, of course incorrectly; it was first tr. into Chinese by Dharmaraksha, A.D. 266-313 or 317; the first masses are not reported until the time of Liang Wudi, A.D. 538; and were popularized by Amogha (A.D. 732) under the influence of the Yogācārya School. They are generally observed in China, but are unknown to Southern Buddhism. The "idea of intercession on the part of the priesthood for the benefit of" souls in hell "is utterly antagonistic to the explicit teaching of primitive Buddhism'" The origin of the custom is unknown, but it is foisted on to Śākyamuni, whose disciple Maudgalyāyana is represented as having been to purgatory to relieve his mother's sufferings. Śākyamuni told him that only the united efforts of the whole priesthood 十方衆會 could alleviate the pains of the suffering. The mere suggestion of an All Souls Day with a great national day for the monks is sufficient to account for the spread of the festival. Eitel says: "Engrafted upon the narrative ancestral worship, this ceremonial for feeding the ghost of deceased ancestors of seven generations obtained immense popularity and is now practised by everybody in China, by Taoists even and by Confucianists." All kinds of food offerings are made and paper garments, etc., burnt. The occasion, 7th moon, 15th day, is known as the盂蘭會 (or 盂蘭盆會 or 盂蘭齋 or 盂蘭盆齋) and the sutra as 盂蘭經 (or 盂蘭盆經). |
道学者 see styles |
dougakusha / dogakusha どうがくしゃ |
Taoist; moralist |
陰陽道 see styles |
onmyoudou; onyoudou / onmyodo; onyodo おんみょうどう; おんようどう |
Onmyōdō; way of Yin and Yang; occult divination system based on the Taoist theory of the five elements |
四神相応 see styles |
shijinsouou / shijinsoo しじんそうおう |
(yoji) an ideal topography for the four Taoist gods, with a river in the east, a broad avenue in the west, a basin in the south, and a hill in the north |
Variations: |
shinsen しんせん |
(1) (See 仙人・1) immortal mountain wizard (in Taoism); Taoist immortal; supernatural being; (2) (See 十二律) (in Japan) 11th note of the ancient chromatic scale (approx. C) |
Variations: |
shinsen しんせん |
(1) (See 仙人・1) immortal mountain wizard (in Taoism); Taoist immortal; supernatural being; (2) (See 十二律) (in Japan) 11th note of the ancient chromatic scale (approx. C) |
Entries with 2nd row of characters: The 2nd row is Simplified Chinese.
This page contains 42 results for "A Taoist" 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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