THE ILLUMINATOR

Tibetan-English
Encyclopaedic Dictionary

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མི་མཐུན་པའི་རྒྱན་
Transliteration: mi mthun pa'i rgyan
<noun> The name given to the group of ornaments ཀྱང་, ཡང་, and འང་ when they are being used to show two things having a discordant sense e.g., བལྟས་ཀྱང་མ་མཐོང་། "looked but did not see".

མཐུན་པའི་རྒྱན་
Transliteration: mthun pa'i rgyan
<noun> The name given to the group of ornaments ཀྱང་, ཡང་, and འང་ when they are being used to show two things having an additive or concordant sense.

མི་མཐུན་པའི་ཕྱོགས་
Transliteration: mi mthun pa'i phyogs
<adj>phrase> "That which is not conducive to...", "that which is not concordant with.." meaning that which does not fit with the production of something else. E.g., anger and hatred are not conducive to the production of patience because they are not in the same class, they are a class of thing which does not lead to or promote the class of things involved with patience.

རྒྱུ་མཐུན་པ་
Transliteration: rgyu mthun pa
<adj>phrase> "To correspond / conform to a cause". This has the specific meaning of indicating that a result does indeed conform or correspond to its cause. E.g., when you plant a wheat seed in a field, the result will be a wheat plant; this is a case of the effect conforming or corresponding to the cause.
The term is mostly used in philosophical texts but not always. Sometimes it is used…

མཐུན་པའི་སྨན་
Transliteration: mthun pa'i sman
<noun> "Appropriate medicine". The general name for medicine that is determined to be the right one for some sickness that has occurred.

དཔུང་པའི་རྒྱན་
Transliteration: dpung pa'i rgyan
<phrase> One kind of "armlet". This is an ornament worn on the དཔུང་པ་ upper arm. This kind of armlet derives from ancient India where it was regarded as a desirable kind of ornamentation and was worn by people of rank in fancy forms. It is also one of ལོངས་སྤྱོད་རྫོགས་པའི་རྒྱན་བཅུ་གསུམ་ "the thirteen adornments of the saṃbhogakāya".