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He states that the most egregious root samaya to violate is the commitment to one's guru. [5] Foregrounding the mindful observance of the mindstream, whilst intimating the binding reciprocity of samaya, Gyatrul (b. 1924) [6] in his commentary to Chagmé (Wylie: karma-chags-med, fl. 17th century), rendered into English by Wallace (Chagmé et al ...
Samaya (Sanskrit: समय, romanized: Samayā, lit. 'Time') [1] or Samayam (Sanskrit: समयम्, romanized: Samayaṃ) [2] is a Sanskrit term referring to the "appointed or proper time, [the] right moment for doing anything." [3] In Indian languages, samayam, or samay in Indo-Aryan languages, is a unit of time.
Samaya is a Buddhist order as part of the Abhiseka ceremony of empowerment. Samaya may also refer to: Sāmaya (HD 205739), a star in the southern constellation of Piscis Austrinus; Samaya, an album by Bipul Chettri; Samaya, a 1975 Indian Oriya film; Samaya, a 2017 superyacht; Samaya TV, a Kannada television news channel
Samay (mythology), figure in the mythology of the Jola people in Senegal, The Gambia and Guinea-Bissau Samay language, Bantu language of Gabon; Samayā, or Samay, a unit of time in India
Samayasāra (The Nature of the Self) is a famous Jain text composed by Acharya Kundakunda in 439 verses. [1] Its ten chapters discuss the nature of Jīva (pure self/soul), its attachment to Karma and Moksha (liberation).
The language is a relative of African Nova Scotian English, or also as a derivative of African-American Vernacular English (AAVE), with variations unique to the enclave's history in the area. In the 1950 Dominican Republic census, 0.57% of the population (about 12,200 speakers) said that their mother tongue was English. [1]
The Srividya paramparas can be further broadly subdivided into two streams, the Kaula (a vamamarga practice) and the Samaya (a dakshinamarga practice). The Kaula or Kaulachara , first appeared as a coherent ritual system in the 8th century in central India, [ 11 ] and its most revered theorist is the 18th-century philosopher Bhaskararaya ...
The Samaya Mātrikā (en: The Courtesan's Keeper) is a satire written by the 11th-century Kashmiri poet Kshemendra. Originally written in Sanskrit , the work has since been translated into English by A. N. D. Haksar .