There are 59 total results for your Sons search in the dictionary.
| Characters | Pronunciation Romanization |
Simple Dictionary Definition |
子女 see styles |
zǐ nǚ zi3 nu:3 tzu nü shijo しじょ |
children; sons and daughters (1) sons and daughters; children; (2) girl |
七子 see styles |
qī zǐ qi1 zi3 ch`i tzu chi tzu fumiko ふみこ |
(female given name) Fumiko The parable in the Nirvana Sutra of the sick son whose parents, though they love all their sons equally, devote themselves to him. So does the Buddha specially care for sinners. The seven sons are likened to mankind, devas, sravakas, pratyeka-buddhas, and the three kinds of bodhisattvas of the 藏, 通 and 別教. |
三子 see styles |
sān zǐ san1 zi3 san tzu mine みね |
(female given name) Mine The three sons, one filial, wise, and competent; one unfilial but clever and competent; one unfilial stupid, and incompetent; types respectively of bodhisattvas, śrāvakas, and icchahtikas, 涅槃經 33. |
三族 see styles |
sān zú san1 zu2 san tsu sanzoku さんぞく |
(old) three generations (father, self and sons); three clans (your own, your mother's, your wife's) three types of relatives (e.g. father, children and grandchildren; parents, siblings, wife and children; etc.) |
三曹 see styles |
sān cáo san1 cao2 san ts`ao san tsao sansou / sanso さんそう |
the Three Caos (Cao Cao 曹操 and his sons Cao Pi 曹丕 and Cao Zhi 曹植), who established the Wei or Cao Wei dynasty 曹魏, and were all three noted poets and calligraphers sergeant (JSDF) |
三男 see styles |
mitsuo みつお |
(1) three sons; (2) third son; (given name) Mitsuo |
三蘇 三苏 see styles |
sān sū san1 su1 san su |
the Three Su's (famous Song dynasty writers Su Xun 蘇洵|苏洵[Su1 Xun2] and his sons Su Shi 蘇軾|苏轼[Su1 Shi4] and Su Zhe 蘇轍|苏辙[Su1 Zhe2]) |
佛子 see styles |
fó zǐ fo2 zi3 fo tzu busshi ぶっし |
(surname) Busshi Son of Buddha; a bodhisattva; a believer in Buddhism, for every believer is becoming Buddha; a term also applied to all beings, because all are of Buddha-nature. There is a division of three kinds: 外子 external sons, who have not yet believed; 度子 secondary sons, Hīnayānists; 眞子 true sons, Mahāyānists. |
兒女 儿女 see styles |
ér nǚ er2 nu:3 erh nü |
children; sons and daughters; a young man and a young woman (in love) |
外子 see styles |
wài zǐ wai4 zi3 wai tzu sotoko そとこ |
(polite) my husband (female given name) Sotoko external sons |
大通 see styles |
dà tōng da4 tong1 ta t`ung ta tung daitsuu / daitsu だいつう |
see 大通區|大通区[Da4 tong1 Qu1]; see 大通回族土族自治縣|大通回族土族自治县[Da4 tong1 Hui2 zu2 Tu3 zu2 Zi4 zhi4 xian4] (surname) Daitsuu 大通智勝 Mahābhijñā Jñānābhibhu. The great Buddha of supreme penetraton and wisdom. "A fabulous Buddha whose realm was Sambhava, his kalpa Mahārūpa. Having spent ten middling kalpas in ecstatic meditation he became a Buddha, and retired again in meditation for 84,000 kalpas, during which his sixteen sons continued (as Buddhas) his preaching. Incarnations of his sons are," Akṣobhya, Merukūṭa, Siṃhaghoṣa, Siṃhadhvaja, Ākāśapratiṣṭhita, Nityapaṛvrtta, Indradhvaja, Brahmadhvaja, Amitābha, Sarvalokadhātū- padravodvegapratyuttīrna, Tamāla-patra-candanagandha, Merukalpa, Meghasvara, Meghasvararāja, Sarvaloka-bhayastambhitatva- vidhvaṃsanakāra, and Śākyamuni; v. Eitel. He is said to have lived in a kalpa earlier than the present by kalpas as numerous as the atoms of a chiliocosm. Amitābha is his ninth son. Śākyamuni his sixteenth, and the present 大衆 or assembly of believers are said to be the reincarnation of those who were his disciples in that former aeon; v. Lotus Sutra, chapter 7. |
子弟 see styles |
zǐ dì zi3 di4 tzu ti shitei / shite してい |
child; the younger generation (1) children; sons; children and younger brothers; (2) young people |
孫息 孙息 see styles |
sūn xī sun1 xi1 sun hsi sonsoku |
sons and grandsons |
庶子 see styles |
shù zǐ shu4 zi3 shu tzu shoshi しょし |
son born of a concubine illegitimate child secondary sons |
慈子 see styles |
cí zǐ ci2 zi3 tz`u tzu tzu tzu yoshiko よしこ |
(female given name) Yoshiko Sons of compassion, i.e. the disciples of Maitreya. |
朮赤 术赤 see styles |
zhú chì zhu2 chi4 chu ch`ih chu chih |
Jöchi (c. 1182–1227) Mongol army commander, eldest of Genghis Khan's four sons |
梵相 see styles |
fàn xiàng fan4 xiang4 fan hsiang Bonsō |
Brahmadhvaja, one of the sons of Mahābhijña; his Buddha domain is south-west of our universe. |
毒藥 毒药 see styles |
dú yào du2 yao4 tu yao dokuyaku |
poison Poison, cf. the sons who drank their father's poisons in the 善門 chapter of The Lotus Sutra. |
父子 see styles |
fù zǐ fu4 zi3 fu tzu chichishi ちちし |
father and son father and child; father and son; father and daughter; (place-name) Chichishi fathers and sons |
轉輪 转轮 see styles |
zhuàn lún zhuan4 lun2 chuan lun tenrin |
rotating disk; wheel; rotor; cycle of reincarnation in Buddhism cakravartī, "a ruler the wheels of whose chariot roll everywhere without hindrance." M.W. Revolving wheels; to turn a wheel: also 轉輪王 (轉輪聖王); 輪王; 轉輪聖帝, cf. 斫. The symbol is the cakra or disc, which is of four kinds indicating the rank, i.e. gold, silver, copper, or iron, the iron cakravartī ruling over one continent, the south; the copper, over two, east and south: the silver, over three, east, west, and south; the golden being supreme over all the four continents. The term is also applied to the gods over a universe, and to a buddha as universal spiritual king, and as preacher of the supreme doctrine. Only a cakravartī possesses the 七寳 saptaratna and 1, 000 sons. The cakra, or discus, is also a missile used by a cakravartī for overthrowing his enemies. Its origin is probably the sun with its myriad rays. |
道子 see styles |
dào zǐ dao4 zi3 tao tzu mitsuko みつこ |
(female given name) Mitsuko true sons |
醫子 医子 see styles |
yī zǐ yi1 zi3 i tzu ishi |
The parable of the healing of his poisoned sons by the doctor in the Lotus Sutra. |
釋子 释子 see styles |
shì zǐ shi4 zi3 shih tzu shakushi しゃくし |
(literary) Buddhist monk; Buddhist monastic (surname) Shakushi śākyaputriya, sons of Śākyamuni, i.e. his disciples in general. |
釋迦 释迦 see styles |
shì jiā shi4 jia1 shih chia shaka しゃか |
sugar apple (Annona squamosa) (personal name) Shaka (釋迦婆) Śakra.; Śākya. the clan or family of the Buddha, said to be derived from śāka, vegetables, but intp. in Chinese as powerful, strong, and explained by 能 powerful, also erroneously by 仁charitable, which belongs rather to association with Śākyamuni. The clan, which is said to have wandered hither from the delta of the Indus, occupied a district of a few thousand square miles lying on the slopes of the Nepalese hills and on the plains to the south. Its capital was Kapilavastu. At the time of Buddha the clan was under the suzerainty of Kośala, an adjoining kingdom Later Buddhists, in order to surpass Brahmans, invented a fabulous line of five kings of the Vivartakalpa headed by Mahāsammata 大三末多; these were followed by five cakravartī, the first being Mūrdhaja 頂生王; after these came nineteen kings, the first being Cetiya 捨帝, the last Mahādeva 大天; these were succeeded by dynasties of 5,000, 7,000, 8,000, 9,000, 10,000, 15,000 kings; after which long Gautama opens a line of 1,100 kings, the last, Ikṣvāku, reigning at Potala. With Ikṣvāku the Śākyas are said to have begun. His four sons reigned at Kapilavastu. 'Śākyamuni was one of his descendants in the seventh generation.' Later, after the destruction of Kapilavastu by Virūḍhaka, four survivors of the family founded the kingdoms of Udyana, Bamyam, Himatala, and Sāmbī. Eitel. |
香嚴 香严 see styles |
xiāng yán xiang1 yan2 hsiang yen |
(香光莊嚴) The one whose mind meditates on Buddha becomes interpenetrated and glorified by Buddha-fragrance (and light). There are several deva-sons and others called Xiangyan. |
ソンス see styles |
sonsu ソンス |
(personal name) Sons |
三佛子 see styles |
sān fó zǐ san1 fo2 zi3 san fo tzu san busshi |
All the living are Buddha-sons, but they are of three kinds—the commonalty are 外子 external sons; the followers of the two inferior Buddhist vehicles, 小and 中 乘, are 庶子 secondary sons (i.e. of concubines); the bodhisattvas, i.e. mahāyānists) are 子 true sons, or sons in the truth. |
不動佛 不动佛 see styles |
bù dòng fó bu4 dong4 fo2 pu tung fo Fudō Butsu |
不動如來; 阿閦鞞 or 阿閦婆, Akṣobhya, one of the 五智如來 Five Wisdom, or Dhyāni-Buddhas, viz., Vairocana, Akṣobhya, Ratnasambhava, Amitābha, and Amoghasiddhi. He is especially worshipped by the Shingon sect, as a disciple of Vairocana. As Amitābha is Buddha in the western heavens, so Akṣobhya is Buddha in the eastern heaven of Abhirati, the realm of joy, hence he is styled 善快 or 妙喜, also 無瞋恚 free from anger. His cult has existed since the Han dynasty, see the Akṣobhya-Tathāgatasya-vyūha. He is first mentioned in the prajnapāramitā sutra, then in the Lotus, where he is the first of the sixteen sons of Mahābhijñā-jñānabhibhu. His dhyāni-bodhisattva is Vajrapāṇi. His appearance is variously described, but he generally sits on a lotus, feet crossed, soles upward, left hand closed holding robe, right hand fingers extended touching ground calling it as color is pale gold, some say blue a vajra is before him. His esoteric word is Hum; his element the air, his human form Kanakamuni, v. 拘. Jap. Ashuku, Fudo, and Mudo; Tib. mi-bskyod-pa, mi-'khrugs-pa (mintug-pa); Mong. Ülü küdelükci. v. 不動明王. |
八王子 see styles |
bā wáng zǐ ba1 wang2 zi3 pa wang tzu hachiouji / hachioji はちおうじ |
Hachiōji (city); (place-name, surname) Hachiouji; Hachioji The eight sons of the last of the 20,000 shining Buddhas 燈明佛 born before he left home to become a monk; their names are given in the first chapter of the Lotus sūtra. In Japan there are also eight sons of a Shinto deity, reincarnated as one of the six Guanyin. |
善天子 see styles |
shàn tiān zǐ shan4 tian1 zi3 shan t`ien tzu shan tien tzu zen tenshi |
good sons of gods |
善男子 see styles |
shàn nán zí shan4 nan2 zi2 shan nan tzu zennanshi ぜんなんし |
{Buddh} (See 善男) pious man Good sons, or sons of good families, one of the Buddha's terms of address to his disciples, somewhat resembling 'gentlemen'. |
堂兄弟 see styles |
táng xiōng dì tang2 xiong1 di4 t`ang hsiung ti tang hsiung ti |
father's brother's sons; paternal male cousin |
婆私吒 婆私咤 see styles |
pó sī zhà po2 si1 zha4 p`o ssu cha po ssu cha Bashita |
(婆私) Vasiṣṭha, a brahman who is said to have denied the eternity of nirvana, and maintained that plants had lives and intelligence; Nirvana Sutra 39. One of the seven ancient ṛṣis of Brahmanic mythology, one of the champions in the Ṛg Veda of the priesthood. Name of a brahman whose mother lost her six sons, she became mad, wandered naked, met the Buddha, was restored and became a disciple. Also 婆吒; 私婆吒; 婆私瑟搋 or 婆私瑟柁. |
弟息子 see styles |
otoutomusuko; otomusuko / ototomusuko; otomusuko おとうとむすこ; おとむすこ |
younger sons |
文陀竭 see styles |
wén tuó jié wen2 tuo2 jie2 wen t`o chieh wen to chieh Bundaketsu |
Mūrdhajāta, Māndhātṛ, i. e. 頂生王 born from his mother's head, a reputed previous incarnation of the Buddha, who still ambitious, despite his universal earthly sway, his thousand sons, etc., few to Indra's heaven, saw the 天上玉女 celestial devī, but on the desire arising to rule there on Indra's death, he was hurled to earth; v. 文陀竭王經. |
無動佛 无动佛 see styles |
wú dòng fó wu2 dong4 fo2 wu tung fo Mudō butsu |
Akṣobhya, cf. 阿閦婆 and 不動佛 The unperturbed Buddha, sometimes tr. as motionless, but the reference is to his calmness, serenity, and absence of passion; he is one of the Five Dhyāni-Buddhas, and generally reigns over the east, his kingdom being Abhirati; realm of mystic pleasure. In the Lotus Sūtra he is named as the first of the sixteen sons of Mahābhijñābhibhu. One of his principal characteristics is that of subduing the passions. |
眞佛子 see styles |
zhēn fó zǐ zhen1 fo2 zi3 chen fo tzu shin busshi |
A true Buddha son, i.e. one who has attained the first stage of bodhisattvahood according to the 別教 definition, i.e. the unreality of the ego and phenomena. |
阿濕波 阿湿波 see styles |
ā shī bō a1 shi1 bo1 a shih po Ashūha |
aśvin, the twins of the Zodiac, Castor and Pollux, sons of the Sun and aśvinī; they appear in the sky before dawn riding in a golden carriage drawn by horses or birds. |
三馬同槽 三马同槽 see styles |
sān mǎ tóng cáo san1 ma3 tong2 cao2 san ma t`ung ts`ao san ma tung tsao |
three horses at the same trough (idiom, alluding to Sima Yi 司馬懿|司马懿[Si1 ma3 Yi4] and his two sons); conspirators under the same roof |
五家所共 see styles |
wǔ jiā suǒ gòng wu3 jia1 suo3 gong4 wu chia so kung go ke sho gu |
What the five classes, i. e. rulers, thieves, water, fire, and prodigal sons, have as their common prey, the wealth struggled for by others. |
冷飯食い see styles |
hiyameshigui ひやめしぐい hiyameshikui ひやめしくい |
(1) hanger-on; dependent; (2) someone who is received coldly; (3) (familiar language) third, fourth, fifth, etc. sons (during the Edo period when only the oldest male could inherit an estate) |
善男子來 善男子来 see styles |
shàn nán zǐ lái shan4 nan2 zi3 lai2 shan nan tzu lai zendanshi rai |
come, good sons |
多子多福 see styles |
duō zǐ duō fú duo1 zi3 duo1 fu2 to tzu to fu |
the more sons, the more happiness (idiom) |
提婆菩薩 提婆菩萨 see styles |
tí pó pú sà ti2 po2 pu2 sa4 t`i p`o p`u sa ti po pu sa Daiba bosatsu |
Devabodhisattva, or Āryadeva, or Kāṇadeva, the one-eyed deva, disciple of Nāgārjuna, and one of the 'four sons' of Buddhism; fourteenth patriarch; a monk of Pāṭaliputra; along with Nāgārjuna he is counted as founder of the 三論宗 q.v. |
族姓子女 see styles |
zú xìng zǐ nǚ zu2 xing4 zi3 nv3 tsu hsing tzu nü zokushōshinyo |
sons and daughters of great clans |
有子存焉 see styles |
yǒu zǐ cún yān you3 zi3 cun2 yan1 yu tzu ts`un yen yu tzu tsun yen |
I still have sons, don't I?; fig. future generations will continue the work |
阿泥底耶 see styles |
ā ní dǐ yé a1 ni2 di3 ye2 a ni ti yeh Anaiteiya |
Āditya, the sons of Aditi, the gods; Varuṇa; the sun; the sky; son of the sun-deva. |
龍生九子 龙生九子 see styles |
lóng shēng jiǔ zǐ long2 sheng1 jiu3 zi3 lung sheng chiu tzu |
lit. the dragon has nine sons (idiom); fig. all kinds of characters; good and bad intermingled; It takes all sorts to make a world. |
Variations: |
kyuuri / kyuri きゅうり |
(hist) removal of dissolute sons from the family register (Edo period) |
佛口所生子 see styles |
fó kǒu suǒ shēng zǐ fo2 kou3 suo3 sheng1 zi3 fo k`ou so sheng tzu fo kou so sheng tzu bukku shoshō shi |
sons born from the Buddha's mouth |
冷や飯食い see styles |
hiyameshigui ひやめしぐい hiyameshikui ひやめしくい |
(1) hanger-on; dependent; (2) someone who is received coldly; (3) (familiar language) third, fourth, fifth, etc. sons (during the Edo period when only the oldest male could inherit an estate) |
寶積長者子 宝积长者子 see styles |
bǎo jī zhǎng zhě zǐ bao3 ji1 zhang3 zhe3 zi3 pao chi chang che tzu hōshaku chōja shi |
The sons of the elders of Vaiśālī, who are said to have offered canopies of the seven precious things to Śākyamuni in praise of his teaching. |
善男子善女人 see styles |
shàn nán zǐ shàn nǚ rén shan4 nan2 zi3 shan4 nv3 ren2 shan nan tzu shan nü jen zennanshi zennyonin |
good sons, good women |
大悲胎藏三昧 see styles |
dà bēi tāi zàng sān mèi da4 bei1 tai1 zang4 san1 mei4 ta pei t`ai tsang san mei ta pei tai tsang san mei daihi taizō zanmai |
The samādhi in which Vairocana evolves the group, and it is described as the "mother of all Buddha-sons". |
不孝有三,無後為大 不孝有三,无后为大 |
bù xiào yǒu sān , wú hòu wéi dà bu4 xiao4 you3 san1 , wu2 hou4 wei2 da4 pu hsiao yu san , wu hou wei ta |
there are three ways to be unfilial; having no sons is the worst (from Mencius 孟子[Meng4 zi3]) |
Variations: |
hiyameshikui; hiyameshigui ひやめしくい; ひやめしぐい |
(1) hanger-on; dependent; (2) someone who is received coldly; (3) (familiar language) third, fourth, fifth, etc. sons (during the Edo period when only the oldest male could inherit an estate) |
積不善の家には必ず余殃あり see styles |
sekifuzennoienihakanarazuyoouari / sekifuzennoienihakanarazuyooari せきふぜんのいえにはかならずよおうあり |
(expression) (archaism) iniquities of fathers are visited upon their sons |
積不善の家には必ず余殃有り see styles |
sekifuzennoienihakanarazuyoouari / sekifuzennoienihakanarazuyooari せきふぜんのいえにはかならずよおうあり |
(expression) (archaism) iniquities of fathers are visited upon their sons |
Variations: |
sekifuzennoienihakanarazuyoouari / sekifuzennoienihakanarazuyooari せきふぜんのいえにはかならずよおうあり |
(expression) (proverb) (See 積善の家には必ず余慶あり) iniquities of fathers are visited upon their sons |
Entries with 2nd row of characters: The 2nd row is Simplified Chinese.
This page contains 59 results for "Sons" 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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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.
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