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Examples

  • On the quarter (uposatha) days of each month, the Buddhist laity had special dis­ciplines to replace the fasting and abstinence of the old Vedic upavasatha, which, in practice, made them live like novices to the Sangha for twenty-four hours: they abstained from sex, did not watch entertainments, dressed soberly, and ate no solid food until midday.

    Buddha Armstrong, Karen, 1944- 2001

  • On the eve of the uposatha, brahmins and ordinary householders alike would fast, abstain from sex and work, and keep night vigil at the hearth.

    Buddha Armstrong, Karen, 1944- 2001

  • Merchants were constantly on the road and could not keep the fires burning, nor could they observe the uposatha days.

    Buddha Armstrong, Karen, 1944- 2001

  • In each month there are six fasts, including the two uposatha days.

    Hinduism and Buddhism, An Historical Sketch, Vol. 3 Charles Eliot 1896

  • Thus, as the author remarks, uposatha is a weekly festival; and there is an approach to a true seven-day week.

    Introduction to the History of Religions Handbooks on the History of Religions, Volume IV Crawford Howell Toy 1877

  • The Sinhala term poya is derived from the Pali and Sanskrit form uposatha (from upa + vas: to fast) primarily signifying "fast day."

    Kottu 2009

  • [the bimonthly purification of transgressions (sojong) (gso-sbyong, Skt. poshadha, Pali: uposatha), the installation of the summer retreat (dbyar-sbyor, Skt. varshopanayika, Pali: vassopanayika), and the parting from the restrictions of the summer retreat (dgag-dbye, Skt. pravarana, Pali: pavarana)].

    A Summary Report of the 2007 International Congress on the Women's Role in the Sangha: Bhikshuni Vinaya and Ordination Lineages ��� Part Four: Day Three and Final Comments by His Holiness 2007

  • “quarter” (uposatha) days of each lunar month, special offer­ings were made to the sacred fire.

    Buddha Armstrong, Karen, 1944- 2001

  • Few biblical ideals have become so thoroughly universalized as the Sabbath, which was either adapted or reinvented by cultures all over the world: from Christianity, which established Sunday as the “Lord’s day,” to Buddhism, which created the weekly uposatha for the “cleansing of the defiled mind.”

    The Ten Commandments David Hazony 2010

  • The bhikkhu sangha ordained Mahapajapati as a bhikkhuni during Buddha’s lifetime, but the full list of bhikkhuni vows, the bhikkhuni bimonthly ceremony for the purification of transgressions (gso-sbyong, Skt. poshadha, Pali: uposatha), and the full ritual for bhikkhuni ordination developed almost a hundred years later, toward the end of King Ashoka’s reign.

    A Summary Report of the 2007 International Congress on the Women's Role in the Sangha: Bhikshuni Vinaya and Ordination Lineages ��� Part Two: Day One 2006

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