Dud: 3 definitions
Introduction:
Dud means something in Hinduism, Sanskrit, the history of ancient India. 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.
India history and geography
Source: Mandala Texts: Yullha and Zhidak: Two Types of Local DeitiesDud (བདུད་) refers to a type of invisible spiritual beings.—The Bhutanese believe in the presence of powerful invisible forces of nature alongside visible humans, animals, birds and insects. In the Bhutanese worldview, which was received from Pre-Buddhist belief systems and reinforced by the Buddhist religion, the world is teeming with many types of sentient beings. People believe in a wide range of invisible spiritual beings including lha (ལྷ་), dud (བདུད་), tsen (བཙན་), gyalpo (རྒྱལ་པོ་), lu (ཀླུ་), ludud (ཀླུ་བདུད་), mamo (མ་མོ་), damsri (དམ་སྲི་), dre (འདྲེ་), srinpo (སྲིན་པོ་), sondre (གསོན་འདྲེ་), shindre (གཤིན་འདྲེ་), tshomen (མཚོ་སྨན་), noejin (གནོད་སྦྱིན་), menmo (སྨན་མོ་), theurang (ཐེའུ་རང་), sadag (ས་བདག་) etc. These beings are said to have different characters, temperaments, powers, habits and existential status.
The history of India traces the identification of countries, villages, towns and other regions of India, as well as mythology, zoology, royal dynasties, rulers, tribes, local festivities and traditions and regional languages. Ancient India enjoyed religious freedom and encourages the path of Dharma, a concept common to Buddhism, Hinduism, and Jainism.
Languages of India and abroad
Sanskrit dictionary
Source: Cologne Digital Sanskrit Dictionaries: Shabda-Sagara Sanskrit-English DictionaryDud (दुद्).—f. (dut or dud) Anxiety, uneasiness. E. du to give pain, affix kvip .
Source: Cologne Digital Sanskrit Dictionaries: Yates Sanskrit-English DictionaryDud (दुद्):—(t, d) 5. f. Anxiety.
Sanskrit, also spelled संस्कृतम् (saṃskṛtam), is an ancient language of India commonly seen as the grandmother of the Indo-European language family (even English!). Closely allied with Prakrit and Pali, Sanskrit is more exhaustive in both grammar and terms and has the most extensive collection of literature in the world, greatly surpassing its sister-languages Greek and Latin.
See also (Relevant definitions)
Starts with (+344): Dud atees, Dud bug, Dud khori, Dud mal, Duda, Duda-gorai, Dudabha, Dudaduda, Dudadudane, Dudaga, Dudagachha, Dudagorai, Dudagu, Dudaiva, Dudakarim, Dudaki, Dudal, Dudala, Dudaligatch, Dudama.
Ends with: Amirgudud, Anadud, Damudud, Ludud, Mahdud, Mardud, Tarddud, Tingon adud, Vidud.
Full-text (+13): Dudda, Dud bug, Dud atees, Dud mal, Dud khori, Duddadin, Ushtradhumaka, Dasika, Gyalpo, Tsen, Shindre, Noejin, Menmo, Theurang, Mamo, Srinpo, Sondre, Lha, Dre, Tshomen.
Relevant text
Search found 13 books and stories containing Dud; (plurals include: Duds). You can also click to the full overview containing English textual excerpts. Below are direct links for the most relevant articles:
Tiruvaymoli (Thiruvaimozhi): English translation (by S. Satyamurthi Ayyangar)
Pasuram 3.5.3 < [Section 5 - Fifth Tiruvaymoli (Moym mam pum polil)]
Pasuram 3.9.7 < [Section 9 - Ninth Tiruvaymoli (Connal Virotam)]
Pasuram 10.4.5 < [Section 4 - Fourth Tiruvaymoli (Carve tavanori)]
Guhyagarbha Tantra (with Commentary) (by Gyurme Dorje)
Text 19.27 (Commentary) < [Chapter 19 (Text And Commentary)]
Text 8.16 (Commentary) < [Chapter 8 (text and commentary)]
Text 8.15 (Commentary) < [Chapter 8 (text and commentary)]
Blue Annals (deb-ther sngon-po) (by George N. Roerich)
Introduction: The (system) of gcod yul and kha rag pa < [Book 13 - Cutting and Kkarakpa]
Chapter 29 - Sonam Gyatso (vii): Labors for the doctrine < [Book 10 - The Kālacakra]
Chapter 1 - Master mar pa and Ngok lineage < [Book 8 - The famous Dakpo Kagyü (traditions)]
Tibet (Myth, Religion and History) (by Tsewang Gyalpo Arya)
3. Nyatri Tsanpo as descendant of God Yablha Daldrug < [Chapter 3 - Nyatri Tsanpo; The First King of Tibet]
Bodhisattvacharyavatara (by Andreas Kretschmar)
Text Section 125 < [Khenpo Chöga’s Oral Explanations]
Text Section 201 < [Khenpo Chöga’s Oral Explanations]
Vasanti < [October 1948]
The Slip between the Cup and the Sip < [April – June, 2007]
Bharathidasan: An Assessment < [Jan. – Mar. 1991 & Apr. – Jun. 1991]