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Mo (Tibetan: མོ་, Wylie: mo), is a form of divination that is part of the culture and religion of Tibet. The Tibetan people consult Mo when making important decisions about health, work or travel. [1] Mo employs dice and there are books written by various lamas on interpretations for the casting of dice.
A plate of momos from Nepal A Tibetan woman making momo in Washington, D.C., United States. The earliest Tibetan dumplings were made of highland barley flour as the outer covering, and beef and mutton as the stuffing. [18] Nowadays, a simple white-flour-and-water dough is generally preferred to make the outer covering of momos.
A Tibetan cuisine meal with (clockwise from top) tingmo steamed bread, thenthuk noodle soup, momos in soup, vegetable gravy (curry), and condiments in center from the Himalaya Restaurant, McLeod Ganj, HP, India A simple Tibetan breakfast. This is a list of Tibetan dishes and foods.
Tummo (gTum mo in Wylie transliteration, also spelled tumo, or tum-mo; Sanskrit caṇḍālī or chandali) is a Tibetan word, literally meaning 'fierce [woman]'. Tummo is also the Tibetan word for 'inner fire.' [7] Tummo may also be rendered in English, approximating its phonemic pronunciation as dumo.
Tingmo (Standard Tibetan: ཀྲིན་མོག) is a steamed bread in Tibetan cuisine. [1] It is sometimes described as a steamed bun [2] that is similar to Chinese flower rolls, [3] with a soft and fluffy texture. [4] It does not contain any kind of filling. A tingmo with some type of filling, like beef or chicken, is called a momo.
The Dalai Lama is reported as using the mo, balls of dough in which have been placed pieces of paper with possible "choices" written on them, to help in making important decisions. [16] Tibetan divination has long featured the mo in making everyday decisions, too. [17] There are books written by various lamas on interpretations for the casting ...
Mokthuk or Mothuk (Tibetan: མའོ་ཁི་ཐུའུ་ཁི་ཡིས་བཤད་རྒྱུར།; Nepali: मुकतुक) is a type of momo soup.It is popular in Tibet, Nepal and Ladakh, a region in northern India.
Mo (divination), a traditional Tibetan Buddhist technique of divination Mo (religion) , an animist religion of the Zhuang people of China Modern Orthodox Judaism , a movement that attempts to synthesize Orthodox Jewish values with the secular world