- དགེ་འདུན།
- དགེ་སློང་གི་དགེ་འདུན།
- ཚོགས།
- སང་གྷ།
- སཾ་གྷ།
- dge ’dun
- dge slong gi dge ’dun
- saM g+ha
- sang g+ha
- tshogs
- saṅgha
- saṃgha
- Term
Though often specifically reserved for the monastic community, this term can be applied to any of the four Buddhist communities—monks, nuns, laymen, and laywomen—as well as to identify the different groups of practitioners, like the community of bodhisattvas or the community of śrāvakas. It is also the third of the Three Jewels (triratna) of Buddhism: the Buddha, the Teaching, and the Community.
- saṅgha
- དགེ་འདུན།
- dge ’dun
- saṅgha
Also rendered here as “community.”
- saṅgha
- དགེ་འདུན།
- dge ’dun
- saṅgha
- saṅgha
- དགེ་འདུན།
- dge ’dun
- saṅgha
- 僧伽
- saṅgha
- དགེ་འདུན།
- dge ’dun
- saṃgha
Though often specifically reserved for the monastic community, this term can be applied to any of the four Buddhist communities—monks, nuns, laymen, and lay women—as well as the community of bodhisattvas.
See also “community.”
- saṅgha
- དགེ་འདུན།
- dge ’dun
- saṅgha
- saṅgha
- དགེ་སློང་གི་དགེ་འདུན།
- dge slong gi dge ’dun
- saṅgha
- Saṅgha
- དགེ་འདུན།
- dge ’dun
- saṅgha
The third of the Three Jewels (Triratna) of Buddhism, the Buddha, the Teaching, and the Community. Sometimes narrowly defined as the community of mendicants, it can be understood as including lay practitioners.
- saṅgha
- དགེ་འདུན།
- dge ’dun
- saṅgha
- saṅgha
- དགེ་འདུན།
- dge ’dun
- saṅgha
- saṅgha
- དགེ་འདུན།
- dge ’dun
- saṅgha
Explained as a “cohesive assembly,” saṅgha refers ultimately to those who have realized the nature of reality in accordance with the Buddhist path or, in a more conventional sense, with an assembly of monastics.
- Saṅgha
- དགེ་འདུན།
- dge ’dun
- saṅgha
- 僧
- saṅgha
- དགེ་འདུན།
- dge ’dun
- saṅgha
- saṅgha
- དགེ་འདུན།
- dge ’dun
- saṅgha
- 僧伽
- saṅgha
- དགེ་འདུན།
- སཾ་གྷ།
- སང་གྷ།
- ཚོགས།
- dge ’dun
- saM g+ha
- sang g+ha
- tshogs
- saṅgha
A congregation of monks, or the totality of the Buddha’s monks regarded as the jewel of the Saṅgha (one of the Three Jewels). Also translated here as “congregation.”
- saṅgha
- དགེ་འདུན།
- dge ’dun
- saṅgha
Though the term is most often used for the monastic community, it can be applied to any of the four Buddhist communities—monks, nuns, laymen, and laywomen—as well as the community of bodhisattvas.
- saṅgha
- དགེ་འདུན།
- dge ’dun
- saṅgha
Also rendered here as “community.”
- community
- དགེ་འདུན།
- dge ’dun
- saṅgha
See “saṅgha.”
- congregation
- དགེ་འདུན།
- dge ’dun
- saṅgha
The community of followers of the Buddha; the third of the triad, the “Three Jewels,” in which Buddhists take refuge. In a narrower sense, it can refer to a congregation of monastics or of advanced bodhisattvas. Also translated here as “community.”
- congregation
- དགེ་འདུན།
- dge ’dun
- saṅgha
- monastic communities
- དགེ་འདུན།
- dge ’dun
- saṅgha