  | 
 | 
  | 
Glossary
 akālika  without involving time
 anicca  inconstancy, ever-changing, impermanent
 anattā  literally not-self; coreless, empty
 arahant  a fully awakened one, a fully liberated one
 āsava  intoxicant; also translated as outflow, influx, effluent, canker, taint
 āsavakkhaye ñāṇa  the knowledge of the destruction of the āsavas
 attā  self, ego, personality, in Buddhism a mere conventional expression, and not a designation for anything really existing, often synonymous with soul
 avijjā  ignorance
 āyatana  sphere of perception or sense in general
 āyatanāni  plural of āyatana  often referring to the 6 senses (salāyatanā)
 bhāva  becoming
 bhavataṇhā  craving for becoming
 brahma-vihāra  one of four meditation practices of loving-kindness, compassion, appreciative joy and equanimity
 bhikkhu  a Buddhist monk
 deva  heavenly being
 dhammā  phenomena
 Dhamma  the teaching of the Buddha and also the way things truly are
 dukkha  bummer, unsatisfactoriness, stress, suffering
 idappaccayatā  this-that conditionality; literally: having its foundation in this
 idappaccayatāpaṭiccasamuppādo  this-that conditionality, dependent origination
 jāti  birth
 jhāna  literally: meditation; one of four (later eight) states of concentration
 kamma (Pāli) / karma (Sanskrit)  action, deed, doing
 kāmataṇhā  sensual craving
 kāraṇa  (Sanskrit) constituent, reason, cause
 khandha  one of the five aggregates: rūpa, vedanā, saññā, saṅkhārā & viññāṇa
 maraṇa  death
 mettā  loving-kindness, unconditional love
 nāmarūpa  name-and-form, sometimes translated as mind-and-body or mentality-and-materiality, especially in the context of dependent origination
 nibbāna (Pāli) / nirvana (Sanskrit)  literally not burning, i.e., not burning with the fires of greed, hate, or delusion; the goal of the holy life, the realization that brings an end to dukkha
 nibbidā  disenchantment
 pāmojja  gladness, worldly joy
 paññā  wisdom
 papañca  mental proliferation
 passaddhi  tranquility
 paṭiccasamuppāda  dependent origination
 phassa  contact, sense-contact
 pīti  glee, rapture
 rūpa  materiality, body
 salāyatanā  the six sense organs and the six sense objects (see also āyatana)
 saṃsāra  worldly existence, the indefinitely repeating cycles of birth, dukkha, and death
 saddhā  usually translated as faith but perhaps more accurately as confidence or trust
 samādhi  indistractability, concentration
 samuppāda  origin, arising, genesis, coming to be, production
 saṃvega  spiritual urgency
 sandiṭṭhika  visible here and now
 saṅkhāra  concoction, fabrication
 saññā  perception, conceptualization, naming, identifying
 sati  mindfulness, remembering to be here now
 sukha  happiness/joy
 sukha & dukkha  pleasure and pain
 sutta  discourse, teaching
 Suttas  the second division of the Pāli Canon, consisting of discourses given by the Buddha or his closest disciples
 taṇhā  craving (literally thirst)
 Tathāgata  one arrived at suchness, a fully awakened one
 udāna  exclamation, inspired utterance
 upādāna  clinging, also fuel
 uppāda  coming into existence, appearance, birth
 upekkhā  equanimity (literally gaze upon)
 vedanā  initial automatic mental response to sensory inputs as pleasant, unpleasant or neither-pleasant-nor-unpleasant; valence, feeling (but not emotion!)
 vicāra  examining
 vimutti  release, deliverance, emancipation, liberation
 vipassanā  insight, an understood experience
 virāga  dispassion, literally not-colored
 viññāṇa  consciousness; occasionally it means mind; literally divided knowing
 yathābhūtañāṇadassana  knowing and seeing things as they are, knowing and seeing what's actually happening
 | 
 
  |