Definitions
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
- Buddha 1 Originally Siddhartha Gau·ta·ma (gôˈtə-mə, gouˈ-) 563?-483? B.C. Indian mystic and founder of Buddhism. He began preaching after achieving supreme enlightenment at the age of 35.
- n. One who has achieved a state of perfect spiritual enlightenment in accordance with the teachings of Buddha.
- n. A representation or likeness of Buddha.
Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia
- n. An epithet, meaning the Wise or Enlightened One, applied to the historical founder of Buddhism (according to some in the eleventh century b. c., but more probably in the sixth century), regarded by the Buddhists as the fourth in a series of five messianic Buddhas. He was an Indian prince of the Sakya tribe, and hence called Sakyamuni (the Sakya sage), the name preferred in China and Japan. His original name was Siddartha (literally, “the realization of all the meanings,” that is, of the portents at his birth); that most used in Burma, Ceylon, etc., is Gautama or Gotama (literally, “most victorious”), the sacerdotal name of the Sakya tribe.
- n. [lowercase] One who attains to perfect enlightenment such as that ascribed to the founder of Buddhism, and devotes his powers to the salvation of mankind.
- n. Sometimes also Boodh, Boodha.
Wiktionary
- n. Shakyamuni Buddha, Nepalese spiritual and philosophical teacher and founder of Buddhism; Siddhartha Gautama.
- n. Any of the other Buddhas named in Buddhist scriptures.
- n. An enlightened or awakened sentient being.
- n. A statue or image of any Buddha.
GNU Webster's 1913
- n. The title of an incarnation of self-abnegation, virtue, and wisdom.
- n. The title of Siddhartha or Gautama, a deified religious teacher of the Buddhists and the founder of Buddhism; called also
Gautama Siddartha orSakya Sinha (or Muni). From three newly discovered inscriptions of the emperor Asoka it follows that the 37th year of his reign was reckoned as the 257th from the death of Buddha. Hence it is inferred that Buddha died between 482 and 472 B. C. It being agreed that he lived to be eighty, he was born between 562 and 552 B. C. The Buddhist narratives of his life are overgrown with legend and myth. Senart seeks to trace in them the history of the sun-hero. Oldenberg finds in the most ancient traditions -- those of Ceylon -- at least definite historical outlines. Siddhartha, as Buddha was called before entering upon his great mission, was born in the country and tribe of the Sakhyas, at the foot of the Nepalese Himalayas. His father, Suddhodana, was rather a great and wealthy landowner than a king. He passed his youth in opulence at Kapila-vastu, the Sakhya capital. He was married and had a son Rahula, who became a member of his order. At the age of twenty-nine he left parents, wife, and only son for the spiritual struggle of a recluse. After seven years he believed himself possessed of perfect truth, and assumed the title of Buddha, 'the enlightened.' He is represented as having received a sudden illumination as he sat under the Bo-tree, or ' tree of knowledge,' at Bodhgaya or Buddha-Gaya. For twenty-eight or, as later narratives give it, forty-nine days he was variously tempted by Mara. One of his doubts was whether to keep for himself the knowledge won, or to share it. Love triumphed, and he began to preach, at first at Benares. For forty-four years he preached in the region of Benares and Behar. Primitive Buddhism is only to be gathered by inference from the literature of a later time. Buddha did not array himself against the old religion. The doctrines were rather the outgrowth of those of certain Brahmanical schools. His especial concern was salvation from sorrow, and so from existence. There are "four noble truths": (1) existence is suffering; (2) the cause of pain is desire, (3) cessation of pain is possible through the suppression of desire; (4) the way to this is the knowledge and observance of the "good law " of Buddha. The end is Nirvana, the cessation of existence. Buddhism was preached in the vulgar tongue, and had a popular literature and an elaborately organized monastic and missionary system. It made its way into Afghanistan, Bactriana., Tibet, and China. It passed away in India not from Brahman persecution, but rather from internal causes, such as its too abstract nature, too morbid view of life, relaxed discipline, and overgrowth of monasticism, and also because Shivaism and Vishnuism employed many of its own weapons more effectively. The system has been variously modified in dogma and rites in the many countries to which it has spread. It is supposed to number about 850,000,000 of adherents, who are principally in Ceylon, Tibet, China, and Japan.
WordNet 3.0
- n. one who has achieved a state of perfect enlightenment
- n. founder of Buddhism; worshipped as a god (c 563-483 BC)
Etymologies
- Sanskrit buddha-, enlightened, past participle of bodhati, he awakes; see bheudh- in Indo-European roots. (American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition)
Examples
“Binod Joshi/Associated Press BUDDHA REBORN: Ram Bahadur Bamjan, 18, center in white, is believed to be the reincarnation of Buddha.”
“_Buddha_, p. 155.] [Footnote 3: Especially Köppen views Buddha as a democratic reformer and liberator.] [Footnote 4: Emile Senart, _Essai sur la légende du Buddha_.”
The Religions of India Handbooks on the History of Religions, Volume 1, Edited by Morris Jastrow
“Lost in the debate about Aqua Buddha is a discussion about some of the other issues in Kentucky, where unemployment is at 10 percent.”
“Aqua Buddha is an elusive deity that, according to a quote in an article in GQ, Rand Paul tried to induce someone to "worship" as a college prank.”
The Washington Post: Exclusive -- interview with Aqua Buddha
“* Factcheck. org says the Jack Conway ad attacking Rand Paul over Aqua Buddha is accurate on the facts.”
“Nakamura even gives them a bit of an Odd Couple twist: Buddha is frugal and kind of uptight; Jesus goes with the flow.”
“Arya Tara, a celestial Buddha, is often referred to as the mother of all Buddhas, and her image is in monasteries and temples throughout Central Asia.”
The Huffington Post: April L. Bogle: Her Holiness: Is the Time Right for a Female Dalai Lama?
“To me, Buddha is not a spirit, a person or a god," he says.”
The Huffington Post: Menachem Wecker: The Reality of Fake Buddhas: A New Ancient Art Exhibit
“Yes, Aqua Buddha is back in today's ad of the day.”
“The Aqua Buddha just made a joke there, because the Aqua Buddha is physically blue!”
The Washington Post: Exclusive -- interview with Aqua Buddha
Lists
These user-created lists contain the word ‘Buddha’.
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INTERP - titles
Political and religious titles from the UK, US, EU and some other countries. The list is far from exclusive.
Commissioner, Madame Commissioner, High Representati..., President of the ..., Right Honourable, Honourable, Reverend, Admiral of the Fleet, Aesymnetes, Agonothetes, Agoranomos, Air Marshal and 350 more...
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Interesting words
A list of words that are odd or words that I have looked up.
concupiscence, brize, scree, scoria, forestaff, spanaemia, valetudinarianism, distasture, pyrethrum, laudanum, gentian, bicameral and 11184 more...
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gods (2 syllable)
A list of mythological gods that people have worshipped throughout history (includes primordial dieties).
They can be animate or inanimate (male or female). 2 syllables
Please C...Chaos, Chronos, Gaia, al-lat, Ishtar, Buddha, Shiva, Atlas, Tethys, Kronos, Hera, Ares and 29 more...
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Words to live by
and my mantras
faith, God, Buddha, Muhammad, laughter, simplicity, hope, gratitude, Jesus, science, theology, agnosticism and 16 more...
Tweets
Looking for tweets for Buddha.

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