释义 |
Examples:Tripitaka (602-664) Tang dynasty Buddhist monk and translator, who traveled India 629-645—Xuanzang (602-664) Tang dynasty Buddhist monk and translator, who traveled India 629-645—take oaths as a monk (Buddhism)—travel widely (esp. as Daoist priest or Buddhist monk)—Jianzhen or Ganjin (688-763), Tang Buddhist monk, who crossed Japan after several unsuccessful attempts, influential in Japanese Buddhism—poor monk (humble term used by monk of himself)—Kumarajiva c. 334-413, Buddhist monk and translator of Zen texts—tonsure (shaved head of Buddhist monk)—lit. monk holding an umbrella: no hair, no sky—cut one's hair (as part of a minority ritual or in order to become a monk)—Buddhist monk (loanword from Sanskrit "bhiksu")—Jianzhen or Ganjin (688-763), Tang dynastic Buddhist monk, who crossed Japan after several unsuccessful attempts, influential in Japanese Buddhism—honored sir (a person of higher status or seniority, or a Buddhist monk)—evil creature (preventing a Buddhist monk from progressing enlightenment)—designation of a person by a monk—as a monk for today, toll today's bell (idiom); do one's job mechanically—kasaya, a patchwork outer vestment worn by a Buddhist monk—Lu Zhengxiang (1871-1949), Chinese diplomat and Catholic monk—confine to one location (e.g. student, soldier, prisoner, monk etc)—monk (Sanskrit: Sramana, originally refers north India)—leave home (to become a Buddhist monk or nun)—lit. like a three-meter high monk , you can't rub his head [idiom.]—the monk can run away, but the temple won't run with him [idiom.]— |