Anicca Sanna, Aniccasanna, Aniccasaññā: 2 definitions
Introduction:
Anicca Sanna means something in Buddhism, Pali. If you want to know the exact meaning, history, etymology or English translation of this term then check out the descriptions on this page. Add your comment or reference to a book if you want to contribute to this summary article.
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Pali-English dictionary
aniccasaññā (အနိစ္စသညာ) [(thī) (ထီ)]—
[anicca+saññā]
[အနိစ္စ+သညာ]
[Pali to Burmese]
aniccasaññā—
(Burmese text): (က) မမြဲ-အနိစ္စ-ဟု ဖြစ်သော သညာ။ မမြဲ-သော-အနိစ္စဖြစ်သော-ခန္ဓာ ၅-ပါးအပေါင်း၌- အနိစ္စဟု ဖြစ်သော-အနိစ္စလက္ခဏာကို သိမ်းဆည်းတတ်သော-သညှာ။ (ခ) မမြဲ-အနိစ္စ-ဟု ပွါးများသော ပုဂ္ဂိုလ်အားဖြင့်သော သညာ။ အနိစ္စသညာဘာဝနာနုယောဂ-လည်းကြည့်။ (ဂ) အနိစ္စဟု ရှုကြောင်းဖြစ်သော ဝိပဿနာ-အနိစ္စာနုပဿနာ-,တကွဖြစ်သော သညာ။ (ဃ) အနိစ္စသညာအဦးရှိသော၊ ဝိပဿနာ၊ အနိစ္စာနုပဿနာ။
(Auto-Translation): (a) The principle that refers to non-self or not-self. It is the doctrine that can sustain the characteristic of non-self within the five aggregates that constitute the non-self. (b) The principle that refers to persons who embody non-self. Also refer to the nature of non-self in the context of the various states of meditative absorption. (c) The principle that views the characteristics of non-self as true knowledge, which are also both wisdom and non-self characteristics. (d) The principle that primarily concerns non-self, wisdom, and non-self characteristics.

Pali is the language of the Tipiṭaka, which is the sacred canon of Theravāda Buddhism and contains much of the Buddha’s speech. Closeley related to Sanskrit, both languages are used interchangeably between religions.
See also (Relevant definitions)
Partial matches: Anicca, San na, Sanna.
Full-text: Aniccasanni, Aniccasannabhavana, Aniccasannanuloma, Aniccasannabhavananuyoga, Aniccasannaparicita, Aniccasannanana, Giri Sutta, Anicca, Bodhi, Dukkha.
Relevant text
Search found 5 books and stories containing Anicca Sanna, Aniccasanna, Aniccasaññā, Anicca-saññā; (plurals include: Anicca Sannas, Aniccasannas, Aniccasaññās, saññās). You can also click to the full overview containing English textual excerpts. Below are direct links for the most relevant articles:
Maha Buddhavamsa—The Great Chronicle of Buddhas (by Ven. Mingun Sayadaw)
Part 2 - Establishment of Rāhula in Arahatship through the Cūla-Rāhulovāda Sutta < [Chapter 32b - The Buddha’s Fourteenth Vassa at Savatthi]
Part 4 - Duties of Venerable Sāriputta < [Chapter 31 - The Monk Sudinna, the Son of the Kalanda Merchant]
Sakka’s Question (12): On the Restraint of the Faculties (indriya-saṃvara-sīla) < [Chapter 39 - How the Āṭānāṭiya Paritta came to be Taught]
Cetasikas (by Nina van Gorkom)
Chapter 3 - Perception < [Part I - The Universals]
Food for the Heart (by Ajahn Chah)
Healing Through Letting Go < [Volume 16, Issue 5 (2025)]
History of Science in South Asia
Elements of the Buddhist Medical System < [Vol. 11 (2023)]