Page 265 - Pali English Dictionary.
P. 265

Khattiya                                                                                           Khandha



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           A ii.86; S i.71, 93; Vin iv.6 — 10. On the religious side of  ruci, in def. of idha (Vbh 245), tattha (Nd ), diṭṭhi (Nd ), cp.
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           the question D iii.82; 93; M i.149, 177; ii.84; S i.98. Wealth  Nd 151 and Vbh 325 sq. — akkhanti intolerance Vin iv.241
           does not come into consideration at all. Only a very small per-  (=kopa); Vbh 360 (in def as opp. of khanti Dhs 1341. q. v.
           centage of the khattiyas were wealthy in the opinion of that  above), 378.
           time and place. Such are referred to at S i.15. All kings and  -bala (nt.) the force of forbearance; (adj.) one whose
           chieftains were khattiyas D i.69, 136; iii.44, 46, 61; A i.106;  strength is patience:...  aduṭṭho yo titikkhati khantībalaṁ
           iii.299; iv.259. Khattiyas are called rājāno Dhp 294, quoted  balānīkaṁ tam ahaṁ brūmi brāhmaṇaṁ Dh 399=Sn 623; —
           Netti 165.                                              DhA iv.164; Ps ii.171, 176; -mettā forbearing love, in phrase
               -âbhiseka the inauguration of a king A i.107, 108 (of the  kh° — mettânuddayasampanna (adj.) one whose character
           crown — prince)=A ii.87; -kaññā a maid of khattiya birth J  is compassion and loving forbearance J i.151, 262; PvA 66
                                                                                            n
           i.60; iii.394; -kula a khattiya clan, a princely house, Vin ii.161  (+yuttakāra); VvA 71 (in expl of akodhana); -suñña (nt.)
           (w. ref. to Gotama's descent); iii.80; -parisā the assembly of  the void of khanti Ps ii.183; -soracca (nt.) gentleness and for-
           the khattiyas; as one of the four parisās (kh°, brāhmaṇa°, ga-  bearance S i.100, 222; A ii.68; J iii.487; DhA i.56; °e niviṭṭha
           hapati°, samaṇa) at Vin i.227; A ii.133; as the first one of the  "established in forbearance and meekness" A iii.46=D iii.61.
           eight (1 — 4 as above, Cātummahārājika°, Tāvatiṁsa°, Māra°,  Khantika (adj.) [fr. prec.] acquiescing in —, of such and such
           Brahma°) at M i.72=D iii.260; -mahāsāla "the wealthy khat-                                          d
                                                                   a belief, in añña° belonging to another faith, comb with
           tiya" (see above ii.1) D iii.258, etc.; -māyā "the magic of
                                                                   aññadiṭṭhika and aññarucika D i.187; M i.487.
           the noble" DhA i.166; -vaṁsa aristocratic descent DA i.267;
                                                                Khandati [skand] to jump, only in cpd. pakkhandati; given as
           -sukhumāla a tender, youthful prince (of the Tathāgata: bud-
                                                                   root khand at Dhtm 196 with meaning "pakkhandana."
           dha°, kh°) DhA i.5.
                                                                Khandha [Sk. skandha] — I. Crude meaning: bulk, massiveness
        Khattiyī (f.) a female khattiya, in series brāhmaṇī kh° vessī suddī
                                                                   (gross) substance. A. esp. used (a) of an elephant: the bulk
           caṇḍālī nesādī veṇī rathakārī pukkusī A iii.229; similarly M
                                                                   of the body, i. e. its back S i.95; vāraṇassa J iii.392; hatthi
           ii.33, 40.
                                                                   — khandha — vara — gata on the back of the state elephant
                                               n
        °Khattuṁ [Sk. °kṛtvah, cp. °kad] in comp with numerals
                                                                   J i.325; PvA 75. Also with ref. to an elephant (hatthināga)
           "times": dvikkhattuṁ, tikkhattuṁ, etc.; twice, three times, etc.
                                                                   sañjāta° "to whom has grown bulk=a large back" Sn 53, expl.
        Khadira [Sk. khadira; Gr. κίσσαρος, ivy; Lat. hedera, ivy] the  SnA 103 by susaṇṭhitakkhandho "well endowed with bulk."
           tree Acacia catechu, in cpds. -angārā (pl.) embers of (burnt)  — (b) of a person: the shoulder or back: nangalaṁ khandhe
           acacia — wood J i.232; PvA 152; -ghaṭikā a piece of a. —  karitvā S i.115 appl. to Māra; Vism 100; DhA iv.168 (ohita°
           wood J iv.88; -tthambha a post of a. — wood DhA iii.206;  — bhāra the load lifted off his shoulder). — — (c) of a tree:
           -patta a bowl made of a. — wood J v.389; -vana a forest of  the trunk. rukkhassa PvA 114, also as rukkha° J i.324; tāla°
           acacias J ii.162; -sūla an impaling stake of a. — wood J iv.29.  the stem of a palm PvA 56; nigrodhassa khandhaja (see cpds.)
                                                                   S i.207=Sn 272; mūlaṁ atikkamma kh° ṁ sāraṁ pariye-
        Khanati see khaṇati.
                                                                   sitabbaṁ "one must go beyond the root and search the trunk
        Khanittī (f.) [to khan, cp. Sk. khanitra] a spade or hoe Vin i.270;
                                                                   for sweetness" S iv.94. — (d) as t.t. in exegetical litera-
           J vi.520=V.89 (+ankusa).
                                                                   ture: section, chapter, lit. material as collected into uniform
        Khantar [n. agent of khanti] possessed of meekness or gentle-  bulk; freq. in postscripts to Texts and Commentaries. See
           ness; docile, manageable. Said of an elephant A ii.116=iii.161  also khandhaka. — B. More general as denoting bulk (—°);
           sq.                                                     e. g. aggi° a great mass of fire M ii.34, 41; J iv.139; udaka°
                                                                   a mass of water (i. e. ocean) A iii.336; S iv.179; J i.324; PvA
        Khanti & Khantī f. [Sk. kṣānti] patience, forbearance, for-
                                                                   62; puñña° a great accumulation of merit A iii.336=S v.400;
           giveness. Def. at Dhs 1341: khantī khamanatā adhivāsanatā
                                                                   bhoga° a store of wealth A v.84; J i.6; maṇi° an extraordinarily
           acaṇḍikkaṁ anasuropo attamanatā cittassa. Most frequent
                                                                   large jewel (possessing magic power) J ii.102 sq. -
           combinations: with mettā (love) (see below); -titikkhā (for-
                                                                      II. Applied meaning. — A. (—°) the body of, a collection
           bearance): khantī paramaṁ tapo titikkhā nibbānaṁ paramaṁ
                                                                   of, mass, or parts of; in collective sense "all that is comprised
           vadanti Buddhā Dh 184=D ii.49=Vism 295; khantiyā bhiyyo
                                                                   under"; forming the substance of. — (a) dukkha° all that is
           na vijjati, S i.226; cp. DhA iii.237: titikkhā — sankhātā
                                                                   comprised under "dukkha," all that goes to make up or forms
           khantī; -avihiṁsā (tolerance): kh°, avihiṁsā, mettatā, anu-
                                                                   the substance, the idea of "ill." Most prominent in phrase ke-
           dayatā, S v.169; -akodhana (forbearing, gentle) VvA 71;
                                                                   valassa dukkhakhandhassa samudaya and nirodha (the origin
           -soraccaṁ (docility, tractableness) D iii.213= A i.94; also
                                                                   & destruction of all that is suffering) with ref. to the paṭic-
           with maddava (gentleness) and s. as quality of a well — bred
                                                                   casamuppāda, the chain of causal existence (q. v.) Vin i.1;
           horse A iii.248, cp. A ii.113 and khantā; -sovaccassatā (kind
                                                                   S ii.95; iii.14; A i.177; v. 184 & passim. Similarly: samu-
           speech) Sn 266 (cp. KhA 148). See also cpds. — Khantī
                                                                   daya Vbh 135 sq. nirodha Nett 64; antakiriyā A i.147; vyādhi-
           is one of the ten paramitās J i.22, 23: cp. A iii.254, 255.
                                                                   maraṇatunnānaṁ dukkhakkhandhaṁ vyapānudi Th 2, 162. —
           — In other connections: khantiyā upasamena upeta S i.30;
                                                                   (b) lobha° dosa° moha° the three ingredients or integrations of
           ativissuto Sdhp 473; anulomikāya kh°iyā samannāgata (being
           of gentle and forbearing disposition) A iii.437, 441; Ps ii.236  greed, suffering and bewilderment, lit. "the big bulk or mass
           sq.; Vbh 340. See also A iii.372; Sn 189, 292, 897, 944. —  of greed" (see also under padāleti), S v.88 (nibbijjhati through
           In scholastic language frequent in combination diṭṭhi khanti  the satta bojjhangā). — (c) vayo° a division of age, part of
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                                                                   age, as threefold: purima°, majjhima°, pacchima° Nd in def.
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