- བསླབ་པ་རྣམ་པ་ལྔ་པོ།
- བསླབ་པ་ལྔ་པོ།
- བསླབ་པ་ལྔ།
- བསླབ་པ།
- བསླབ་པའི་གནས་ལྔ།
- བསླབ་པའི་གཞི་ལྔ་པོ།
- བསླབ་པའི་གཞི་ལྔ།
- bslab pa’i gzhi lnga
- bslab pa
- bslab pa lnga po
- bslab pa rnam pa lnga po
- bslab pa’i gnas lnga
- bslab pa lnga
- bslab pa’i gzhi lnga po
- pañcaśikṣāpada
- śikṣā
- pañcaśikṣā
- pañcan śikṣāpada
- śikṣita
- Term
Refers to the five fundamental precepts of abstaining from killing, stealing, sexual misconduct, lying, and consuming intoxicants.
- five precepts
- བསླབ་པའི་གནས་ལྔ།
- bslab pa’i gnas lnga
- pañcaśikṣā
To abstain from killing, theft, sexual misconduct, lying, and intoxicants.
- five precepts
- བསླབ་པ་ལྔ་པོ།
- བསླབ་པ་རྣམ་པ་ལྔ་པོ།
- bslab pa lnga po
- bslab pa rnam pa lnga po
- pañcaśikṣā AO
In The Benefits of the Five Precepts, bslab pa / śikṣā is used in its second main sense as it appears in the Vinaya (the first being “training”), namely, five kinds of right conduct that are observed by all lay Buddhists. They are refraining from (1) killing, (2) stealing, (3) sexual misconduct, (4) speaking falsehoods or lying, and (5) consuming intoxicants (alcohol in particular). The term is here used synonymously with the “five disciplines.”
- five precepts
- བསླབ་པའི་གནས་ལྔ།
- bslab pa’i gnas lnga
- pañcaśikṣāpada
Five vows taken by upāsakas and upāsikās: to not kill, steal, commit sexual misconduct, lie, or take intoxicants.
- five precepts
- བསླབ་པའི་གཞི་ལྔ།
- bslab pa’i gzhi lnga
- pañcaśikṣā
Five trainings for all vehicles in general: avoiding killing, stealing, sexual misconduct, lying, and taking intoxicants (alcohol, etc.).
- five precepts
- བསླབ་པའི་གཞི་ལྔ།
- bslab pa’i gzhi lnga
- pañcaśikṣāpada
- five precepts
- བསླབ་པ་ལྔ།
- bslab pa lnga
- pañcaśikṣāpada
Five basic rules of conduct for all Buddhists (= Skt. pañcaśīla): abstaining from (1) killing, (2) stealing, (3) sexual misconduct, (4) false speech, and (5) intoxicants (alcohol).
- five precepts
- བསླབ་པའི་གཞི་ལྔ་པོ།
- bslab pa’i gzhi lnga po
- pañcaśikṣāpada
- five precepts
- བསླབ་པའི་གཞི་ལྔ་པོ།
- bslab pa’i gzhi lnga po
- pañcaśikṣāpada
Five fundamental precepts of abstaining from (1) killing, (2) stealing, (3) sexual misconduct, (4) lying, and (5) intoxication.
- five basic precepts
- བསླབ་པའི་གཞི་ལྔ།
- bslab pa’i gzhi lnga
- pañcaśikṣāpada
- five basic precepts
- བསླབ་པའི་གཞི་ལྔ།
- bslab pa’i gzhi lnga
- pañcaśikṣāpada
The five basic rules of conduct undertaken by lay Buddhist practitioners: abstaining from (1) killing, (2) taking what is not given (3) sexual misconduct, (4) false speech or lying, and (5) drinking intoxicants.
- five bases for training
- བསླབ་པའི་གཞི་ལྔ།
- bslab pa’i gzhi lnga
- pañcaśikṣāpada
Refers to the five fundamental precepts of abstaining from killing, stealing, sexual misconduct, lying, and consuming intoxicants.
- five bases of training
- བསླབ་པའི་གཞི་ལྔ།
- bslab pa’i gzhi lnga
- pañcaśikṣāpada
Abstaining from killing, stealing, sexual misconduct, lying, and intoxication.
- five disciplines
- བསླབ་པ་ལྔ།
- bslab pa lnga
- pañcaśikṣā
- five fundamental precepts
- བསླབ་པའི་གཞི་ལྔ།
- bslab pa’i gzhi lnga
- pañcaśikṣāpada
- five moral precepts
- བསླབ་པའི་གཞི་ལྔ།
- bslab pa’i gzhi lnga
- pañcaśikṣāpada
- five-point training
- བསླབ་པའི་གཞི་ལྔ།
- bslab pa’i gzhi lnga
- pañcan śikṣāpada
- instruction
- བསླབ་པ།
- bslab pa
- śikṣita
A general term for practice of the Dharma. Sometimes translated as “training.”
Often translated as “training,” here it has the meaning associated with the Vinaya, which is “right conduct,” “ethical behavior,” or “precept.”