Definitions
from The Century Dictionary.
- noun The grass Setaria Italica, or Italian millet.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- noun (Bot.) A kind of millet (
Setaria Italica ); German millet.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun A kind of
millet (Setaria italica); German millet.
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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Alex: The Tibetan word is "timug" (gti-mug), in Sanskrit moha, which is a very difficult word to translate.
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"The show waits for no one," she said as a man sporting high-heeled boots, skinny jeans and a moha wk stomped past her on his way into New York Fashion Week.
From Public Housing to Tents Erica Orden 2011
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Naivety (moha) is the confusion, either about cause and effect or about reality, that accompanies destructive behavior or thought.
20 Dissolving Disturbing Emotions into Underlying Deep Awareness 2009
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Naivety (moha) is the confusion, either about cause and effect or about reality, that accompanies destructive behavior or thought.
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Tamas is naivety (Tib. gti-mug, Skt. moha) or ignorance; rajas is desire and anger; and sattva is the mind that is free of all three.
The Kalachakra Presentation of the Prophets of the Non-Indic Invaders (Full Analysis) 2006
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When you breathe in, imagine your breath in the form of white light passing down both right and left energy-channels and accumulating in your central one in which the energy-wind of the disturbing emotion of naivety (gti-mug, Skt. moha, closed-mindedness) is blocked and frustrated.
A Commentary on A Root Text for Gelug-Kagyu Mahamudra the First Panchen Lama Lozang-chokyi-gyeltsen 2006
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Tamas is naivety (Tib. gti-mug, Skt. moha) or ignorance; rajas is desire and anger; and sattva is the mind that is free of all three.
The Kalachakra Presentation of the Prophets of the Non-Indic Invaders (Full Analysis) 2006
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MINE NOW! moha ha ha gotta go xx mitten prev - next
mitten Diary Entry mitten 2002
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Respectively, the five become naivety (gti-mug, Skt. moha, closed-mindedness), pride and miserliness, greed and attachment, jealousy and envy, and anger and fear.
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All of this occurs together with the disturbing emotion that I like to translate as "naivety" (gti-mug, Skt. moha).
The Twelve Links of Dependent Arising ��� Day Two: The First Seven Links 2000
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