Upādāna
Buddhist concept referring to "attachment, clinging, grasping" / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Upādāna is a Sanskrit and Pali word that means "fuel, material cause, substrate that is the source and means for keeping an active process energized".[1][2] It is also an important Buddhist concept referring to "attachment, clinging, grasping".[3] It is considered to be the result of taṇhā (craving), and is part of the dukkha (dissatisfaction, suffering, pain) doctrine in Buddhism.
Quick Facts Translations of Upādāna, English ...
Translations of Upādāna | |
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English | clinging, grasping, attachment or fuel, material cause |
Sanskrit | उपादान, (upadana) |
Pali | upādāna |
Burmese | ဥပါဒါန် (MLCTS: ṵ pà dàɰ̃) |
Chinese | 取 (Pinyin: qǔ) |
Japanese | 取 (Rōmaji: shu) |
Khmer | ឧបដ្ឋាន (Upathan) |
Korean | 取 (취) (RR: chui) |
Sinhala | උපාදාන |
Tibetan | ལེན་པ (Wylie: len.pa) |
Tagalog | ᜀᜉᜀᜇᜀᜈᜀ (apadana) |
Thai | อุปาทาน (RTGS: upathan) |
Vietnamese | 取 (thủ) |
Glossary of Buddhism |
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