23.12.2012 Views

The Pali Text Society's Pali-English Dictionary

The Pali Text Society's Pali-English Dictionary

The Pali Text Society's Pali-English Dictionary

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

Anabhiraddhi<br />

Anabhiraddhi (f.) [an + abhiraddhi] anger, wrath D i.3 (= kopass!eta' adhivacana' DA i.52).<br />

Anabhisambhu*am!na<br />

Anabhisambhu*am!na (adj.) [ppr. med. of an + abhisam- bhu*!ti] not obtaining, unable to get or keep up D<br />

i.101 (= asamp!pu*anto avisaham!no v! DA i.268).<br />

Anamatagga<br />

Anamatagga (adj.) [ana (= a neg.) + mata (fr. man) + agg! (pl.). So Dhammap!la (avidit -- agga ThA 289);<br />

N!*akitti in 5"k! on DhsA 11; Trenckner, Notes 64; Oldenberg, Vin. <strong>Text</strong>s ii.114. Childers takes it as an +<br />

amata + agga, and Jacobi (Erzähl. 33 and 89) and Pischel (Gram. § 251) as a + namat (fr. nam) + agga. It is<br />

Sanskritized at Divy 197 by anavar!gra, doubtless by some mistake. Weber, Ind. Str. iii.150 suggests an +<br />

!mrta, which does not suit the context at all]. Ep. of Sa6s!ra "whose beginning and end are alike<br />

unthinkable", i. e., without beginning or end. Found in two passages of the Canon: S ii.178, 187 sq. =<br />

iii.149, 151 = v.226, 441 (quoted Kvu 29, called Anamatagga -- pariy!ya at DhA ii.268) and Th 2, 495, 6.<br />

Later references are Nd2 664; PvA 166; DhA i.11; ii.13, 32; Sdhp 505. [Cp. an!mata and amatagga, and cp.<br />

the <strong>English</strong> idiom "world without end". <strong>The</strong> meaning can best be seen, not from the derivation (which is<br />

uncertain), but from the examples quoted above from the Sa6yutta. According to the Yoga, on the contrary<br />

(see e. g., Woods, Yoga -- system of Patañjali, 119), it is a possible, and indeed a necessary quality of the<br />

Yog", to understand the beginning and end of Sa6s!ra].<br />

Anamha<br />

Anamha (adj.) [according to Morris J.P.T.S. 1884, 70 = ana -- mha "unlaughing" with ana = an (cp.<br />

anabh!va & anamatagga) and mha from smi, cp. vimhayati = Sk. vismayati] being in consternation or<br />

distress, crying J iii. 223 (˚k!le = !rodana -- k!le C.).<br />

Anaya<br />

Anaya [a + naya] misfortune, distress Miln 277, usually combd. with vyasana (as also in BSk, e. g. Jtm<br />

215) Vin ii.199; S iv.159; A v.156; Miln 292; VvA 327; Sdhp 362.<br />

Anariya<br />

Anariya (adj.) [an + ariya, see also an!riya] not Aiyan, ignoble, low Vin i.10; D iii.232 (˚voh!ra, 3 sets of 4;<br />

the same at Vin v.125); Sn 664, 782 (˚dhamma); Pug 13. -- See ariya.<br />

Anala<br />

Anala (adj.) [an + ala] 1. not sufficient, not enough; unable, impossible, unmanageable M i.455; J ii.326 =<br />

iv. 471. -- 2. dissatisfied, insatiate J v.63 (= atitta C.). 3. ˚' kata dissatisfied, satiated, S i.15 (k!mesu).<br />

Anavaya<br />

Anavaya (adj.) [derivation doubtful. See Trenckner <strong>Pali</strong> Misc. 65] not lacking, complete in (loc.), fulfilling<br />

D i.88 (= an(na parip(ra -- k!rin DA i.248); A iii.152 (= samatta paripu**a AA quoted by Tr. on Miln 10).<br />

Anavosita

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!