Five silken adornments: Difference between revisions
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<noinclude>The</noinclude> '''five silk adornments''' (Tib. དར་གྱི་ཆོས་གོས་ལྔ་, ''dar gyi chögö nga'', [[Wyl.]] ''dar gyi chos gos lnga'') <noinclude>are: </noinclude> | <noinclude>The</noinclude> '''five silk adornments''' (Tib. དར་གྱི་ཆོས་གོས་ལྔ་, ''dar gyi chögö nga'', [[Wyl.]] ''dar gyi chos gos lnga'') <noinclude>are: </noinclude> | ||
#headband (''cod pan'') | #headband (Wyl. ''cod pan'') | ||
#upper garment (''stod g.yogs'') | #upper garment (Wyl. ''stod g.yogs'') | ||
#long scarf (''dar dbyangs'') | #long scarf (Wyl. ''dar dbyangs'') | ||
#belt (''sku rags'') | #belt (Wyl. ''sku rags'') | ||
#lower garment (''smad dkris'')<ref>Padmakara, Words of | #lower garment (Wyl. ''smad dkris'')<ref>Padmakara, ''[[The Words of My Perfect Teacher]]'', page 267.</ref> | ||
<noinclude>==Alternative Translations== | <noinclude>==Alternative Translations== |
Latest revision as of 20:55, 28 September 2022
The five silk adornments (Tib. དར་གྱི་ཆོས་གོས་ལྔ་, dar gyi chögö nga, Wyl. dar gyi chos gos lnga) are:
- headband (Wyl. cod pan)
- upper garment (Wyl. stod g.yogs)
- long scarf (Wyl. dar dbyangs)
- belt (Wyl. sku rags)
- lower garment (Wyl. smad dkris)[1]
Alternative Translations
- the five silken dharma garments
Notes
- ↑ Padmakara, The Words of My Perfect Teacher, page 267.