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  2. Pentaglot Dictionary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pentaglot_Dictionary

    The Pentaglot Dictionary [1] [2] (Chinese: 御製五體清文鑑, Yuzhi Wuti Qing Wenjian; the term 清文, Qingwen, "Qing language", was another name for the Manchu language in Chinese), also known as the Manchu Polyglot Dictionary, [3] [4] was a dictionary of major imperial languages compiled in the late Qianlong era of the Qing dynasty (also said to be compiled in 1794).

  3. Gyuto Order - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gyuto_Order

    To mark the 100th anniversary of the Tibetan Declaration of Independence, the Gyuto Monks of Tibet performed at the 2013 Glastonbury Festival on 27 June 2013 in the Green Fields. They also created a ceremonial sand mandala, a Tibetan Buddhist tradition of building a symbolic picture of the universe out of coloured sand which, on completion, is ...

  4. Tibetology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tibetology

    Tibetology (Tibetan: བོད་རིག་པ།, Wylie: bod-rig-pa) refers to the study of things related to Tibet, including its history, religion, language, culture, politics and the collection of Tibetan articles of historical, cultural and religious significance. [1]

  5. Shurangama Mantra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shurangama_Mantra

    The Shurangama or Śūraṅgama mantra is a dhāraṇī or long mantra of Buddhist practice in East Asia. Although relatively unknown in modern Tibet, there are several Śūraṅgama Mantra texts in the Tibetan Buddhist canon.

  6. Lhasa Tibetan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lhasa_Tibetan

    འགྲོ་ 'gro བ་ ba མིའི་ mi'i རིགས་ rigs རྒྱུད་ rgyud ཡོངས་ yongs ལ་ la སྐྱེས་ skyes ཙམ་ tsam ཉིད་ nyid ནས་ nas ཆེ་ che མཐོངས་ mthongs དང༌། dang ཐོབ་ thob ཐངགི་ thangagi རང་ rang དབང་ dbang འདྲ་ 'dra མཉམ་ mnyam དུ་ du ...

  7. Rinpoche - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rinpoche

    Rinpoche, also spelled Rimpoche (Tibetan: རིན་པོ་ཆེ ་, Wylie: rin po che, THL: Rinpoché, ZYPY: Rinboqê), is an honorific term used in the Tibetan language. It literally means "precious one", and may refer to a person, place, or thing—like the words "gem" or "jewel" ( Sanskrit : Ratna ).

  8. Yeti - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yeti

    Tibetan lore describes three main varieties of Yetis—the Nyalmo, which has black fur and is the largest and fiercest, standing around fifteen feet tall; the Chuti, which stands around eight feet tall and lives 8,000 and 10,000 ft (2,400 and 3,000 m) above sea level; and the Rang Shim Bombo, which has reddish-brown fur and is only 3 and 5 ft ...

  9. Modern Lhasa Tibetan grammar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern_Lhasa_Tibetan_grammar

    Tibetan grammar describes the morphology, syntax and other grammatical features of Lhasa Tibetan, a Sino-Tibetan language. Lhasa Tibetan is typologically an ergative–absolutive language. Nouns are generally unmarked for grammatical number, but are marked for case. Adjectives are never marked and appear after the noun. Demonstratives also come ...