Yuti, Yù tǐ, Yu ti, Yū tǐ, Yú tī, Yù tí, Yūti: 24 definitions
Introduction:
Yuti means something in Buddhism, Pali, Hinduism, Sanskrit, the history of ancient India, Marathi, Hindi, biology, Tamil. 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.
In Hinduism
Jyotisha (astronomy and astrology)
Yuti (युति).—1. Union 2. Junction. Note: Yuti is a Sanskrit technical term used in ancient Indian sciences such as Astronomy, Mathematics and Geometry.

Jyotisha (ज्योतिष, jyotiṣa or jyotish) refers to ‘astronomy’ or “Vedic astrology” and represents the fifth of the six Vedangas (additional sciences to be studied along with the Vedas). Jyotisha concerns itself with the study and prediction of the movements of celestial bodies, in order to calculate the auspicious time for rituals and ceremonies.
In Buddhism
Chinese Buddhism
[The following represents an unverified English translation. For all purposes consult the original Chinese text.]
喻體 [yu ti]—Tenor — [Technical Term] See the entry for Vehicle (喻依 [yu yi]).
喻體—【術語】見喻依條。(喻依)
[shù yǔ] jiàn yù yī tiáo.(yù yī)
[shu yu] jian yu yi tiao.(yu yi)
Chinese Buddhism (漢傳佛教, hanchuan fojiao) is the form of Buddhism that developed in China, blending Mahayana teachings with Daoist and Confucian thought. Its texts are mainly in Classical Chinese, based on translations from Sanskrit. Major schools include Chan (Zen), Pure Land, Tiantai, and Huayan. Chinese Buddhism has greatly influenced East Asian religion and culture.
India history and geography
Yūti.—cf. sva-sīmā-tṛṇa-yūti-gocara-paryanta (IE 8-5); also written as pūti; a word of uncertain import; probably, ‘[land] reserved [for growing grass, etc.]’ Cf. go-yūti, tṛṇa-yūti, kāṣṭha -yūti. Note: yūti is defined in the “Indian epigraphical glossary” as it can be found on ancient inscriptions commonly written in Sanskrit, Prakrit or Dravidian languages.

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.
Biology (plants and animals)
Yuti in India is the name of a plant defined with Jasminum angustifolium in various botanical sources. This page contains potential references in Ayurveda, modern medicine, and other folk traditions or local practices It has the synonym Jasminum angustifolium Wall. (among others).
Example references for further research on medicinal uses or toxicity (see latin names for full list):
· Botanical Register (1821)
· Species Plantarum, ed. 4 (1797)
If you are looking for specific details regarding Yuti, for example chemical composition, extract dosage, health benefits, pregnancy safety, diet and recipes, side effects, have a look at these references.

This sections includes definitions from the five kingdoms of living things: Animals, Plants, Fungi, Protists and Monera. It will include both the official binomial nomenclature (scientific names usually in Latin) as well as regional spellings and variants.
Languages of India and abroad
Marathi-English dictionary
yuti (युति).—f S Junction in general. 2 In astronomy. Conjunction of sun and moon. 3 In arithmetic. Sum.
yuti (युति).—f Junction. Conjunction of Sun and Moon.
Marathi is an Indo-European language having over 70 million native speakers people in (predominantly) Maharashtra India. Marathi, like many other Indo-Aryan languages, evolved from early forms of Prakrit, which itself is a subset of Sanskrit, one of the most ancient languages of the world.
Sanskrit dictionary
Yuti (युति).—f. [yu-ktin]
1) Union, junction.
2) Being endowed with.
3) Gaining possession of.
4) Sum, addition.
5) (In astr.) Conjunction.
6) The total number.
Derivable forms: yutiḥ (युतिः).
--- OR ---
Yūti (यूति).—f. Mixing, union, junction, connection; करोमि वो बहिर्यूतीन् पिधद्ध्वं पाणिभिर्दृशः (karomi vo bahiryūtīn pidhaddhvaṃ pāṇibhirdṛśaḥ) Bhaṭṭikāvya 7.69.
Derivable forms: yūtiḥ (यूतिः).
Yuti (युति).—f.
(-tiḥ) 1. Joining, uniting. 2. Obtaining possession of. 3. A conjunction, (in astro.) 4. (In arith.) Addition. E. yu to join, ktin aff.
--- OR ---
Yūti (यूति).—f.
(-tiḥ) Joining, mixing. E. yu to join, aff. ktic, and the vowel made long.
Yūti (यूति).—i. e. yu + ti, f. Mixing.
Yuti (युति).—[feminine] union with, possession of ([instrumental] or —°).
1) Yuti (युति):—[from yu] f. uniting, junction, union or meeting with (in [astronomy] ‘conjunction’), [Sūryasiddhānta; Varāha-mihira’s Bṛhat-saṃhitā]
2) [v.s. ...] the being furnished with or obtaining possession of ([instrumental case] or [compound]), [Varāha-mihira’s Bṛhat-saṃhitā]
3) [v.s. ...] the sum, total number, [Sūryasiddhānta]
4) [v.s. ...] the number to be added, [Bījagaṇita]
5) Yūti (यूति):—See goand bahir-yūti.
1) Yuti (युति):—(tiḥ) 2. f. Joining; addition.
2) Yūti (यूति):—(tiḥ) 2. f. Joining, mixing.
Yuti (युति):—(von 2. yu) f.
1) das Zusammentreffen, Zusammenkommen [Sūryasiddhānta 3, 41. 6, 15. 21.] suhṛdyuti mit Freunden [Varāhamihira’s Bṛhajjātaka S. 71, 10. 95, 42. 99, 7.] —
2) das Versehenwerden mit (instr. oder im comp. vorangehend), das in-den-Besitz-Gelangen von: dhanaiḥ [Varāhamihira’s Bṛhajjātaka S. 71, 7.] ratna [12.] —
3) Summe [Sūryasiddhānta 3, 8. 20. 4, 20. 10, 6. 8.] — Vgl. gandha, graha, yūti .
--- OR ---
Yūti (यूति):—(von 2. yu) f. nom. act. [Pāṇini’s acht Bücher 3, 3, 97.] [Vopadeva’s Grammatik 26, 185.] Verbindung, Vereinigung: bahiryūti adj. so v. a. vor die Thür gesetzt [Bhaṭṭikavya 7, 69.] — Vgl. goyūti, yuti .
Yuti (युति):—f. —
1) das Zusammentreffen , -kommen , — mit (im Comp. vorangehend). —
2) das Versehenwerden mit , in den Besitz Gelangen von (Instr. oder im Comp. vorangehend). —
3) Summe. —
4) die hinzuzuaddirende Zahl [Bījagaṇita 51.]
--- OR ---
Yūti (यूति):—f. Nom. act. in go und bahiryūti (Nachtr. 4).
Yuti (युति) in the Sanskrit language is related to the Prakrit word: Jui.
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.
Hindi dictionary
Yuti (युति):—(nf) conjunction; fusion, merger.
...
Kannada-English dictionary
Yuti (ಯುತಿ):—
1) [noun] the act of associating, uniting or of being associated, united.
2) [noun] harmony or agreement of elements or parts; consonance.
Kannada is a Dravidian language (as opposed to the Indo-European language family) mainly spoken in the southwestern region of India.
Tamil dictionary
Yūti (யூதி) noun < yūthī. See யூதிகை. ((சங்கத்தகராதி) தமிழ்சொல்லகராதி) [yuthigai. ((sangathagarathi) thamizhsollagarathi)]
Tamil is an ancient language of India from the Dravidian family spoken by roughly 250 million people mainly in southern India and Sri Lanka.
Chinese-English dictionary
[The following represents an unverified English translation. For all purposes consult the original Chinese text.]
紆體 [yū tǐ] [yu ti]—
Bending over; stooping. "Book of Han, Volume 100, Biography Part 1": "Merely delighting in pillows of classic texts and books (枕經籍書 [zhen jing ji shu]), bending the body at humble gates (衡門 [heng men]), having no support above (上無所蒂 [shang wu suo di]), and no roots below (下無所根 [xia wu suo gen])."
紆體:屈體、屈身。《漢書.卷一○○.敘傳上》:「徒樂枕經籍書,紆體衡門,上無所蒂,下無所根。」
yū tǐ: qū tǐ,, qū shēn. < hàn shū. juǎn yī○○. xù chuán shàng>: “tú lè zhěn jīng jí shū, yū tǐ héng mén, shàng wú suǒ dì, xià wú suǒ gēn.”
yu ti: qu ti,, qu shen. < han shu. juan yi○○. xu chuan shang>: "tu le zhen jing ji shu, yu ti heng men, shang wu suo di, xia wu suo gen."
[The following represents an unverified English translation. For all purposes consult the original Chinese text.]
魚梯 [yú tī] [yu ti]—
A fish ladder, built in streams to allow migratory fish to bypass dams and return upstream to spawn. (, yú tī; 洄游性魚類 [hui you xing yu lei], huíyóuxìng yúlèi; 水壩 [shui ba], shuǐbà; 產卵 [chan luan], chǎnluǎn)
魚梯:建築於溪流中,供洄游性魚類越過水壩回上游產卵的階梯式水槽。
yú tī: jiàn zhú yú xī liú zhōng, gōng huí yóu xìng yú lèi yuè guò shuǐ bà huí shàng yóu chǎn luǎn de jiē tī shì shuǐ cáo.
yu ti: jian zhu yu xi liu zhong, gong hui you xing yu lei yue guo shui ba hui shang you chan luan de jie ti shi shui cao.
[The following represents an unverified English translation. For all purposes consult the original Chinese text.]
喻體 [yù tǐ] [yu ti]—
The subject being described in a simile (譬喻句 [pi yu ju]). For example, in the "Shi Jing - Wei Feng - Shuo Ren" (《詩經 [shi jing].衛風 [wei feng].碩人 [shuo ren]》), "Her skin is like congealed fat (膚如凝脂 [fu ru ning zhi])," the "skin (膚 [fu])" is the subject.
喻體:譬喻句中所要說明的主體。如《詩經.衛風.碩人》:「膚如凝脂。」句中的「膚」。
yù tǐ: pì yù jù zhōng suǒ yào shuō míng de zhǔ tǐ. rú < shī jīng. wèi fēng. shuò rén>: “fū rú níng zhī.” jù zhōng de “fū” .
yu ti: pi yu ju zhong suo yao shuo ming de zhu ti. ru < shi jing. wei feng. shuo ren>: "fu ru ning zhi." ju zhong de "fu" .
喩體 [yù tǐ] refers to: “substance of the example”.
喩體 is further associated with the following language/terms:
[Vietnamese] dụ thể.
[Korean] 유체 / yuche.
[Japanese] ユタイ / yutai.
Chinese language.
See also (Relevant definitions)
Partial matches: Yu, Yu, Ao, Ti.
Starts with: Yu diao fu, Yu ti shi, Yu ti shi shan, Yu tian, Yu tian de tong, Yu tian fa ju jing, Yu tian guo, Yu tian hua er yi gong yang, Yu tian tong yin, Yu tian wu yin, Yu tian xian, Yu tie, Yu ting, Yutika, Yutikai, Yutikakkoti, Yutikam, Yutikha, Yutittiran, Yutti.
Full-text (+308): Yutti, Yudhishthira, Gavyuti, Go-yuti, Suvarnayuthi, Pitayuthi, Svarnayuthi, Grahayuti, Bahiryuti, Samyuti, Yu yi, Viyuti, Gandhayuti, Prayuti, Shu lun yu ti, Yu di, Yu ti shi, Kashtha-yuti, Svayuti, Trina-yuti.
Relevant text
Search found 70 books and stories containing Yuti, Yoothi, Yù tǐ, Yu ti, Yū tǐ, Yú tī, Yù tí, Yudhi, Yudi, Yuthi, Yūti, Yùtǐ, Yūtǐ, Yútī, Yùtí, 喩體, 喻體, 玉體, 紆體, 預提, 预提, 魚梯; (plurals include: Yutis, Yoothis, Yù tǐs, Yu tis, Yū tǐs, Yú tīs, Yù tís, Yudhis, Yudis, Yuthis, Yūtis, Yùtǐs, Yūtǐs, Yútīs, Yùtís). You can also click to the full overview containing English textual excerpts. Below are direct links for the most relevant articles:
Ganitatilaka (Sanskrit text and English introduction) (by H. R. Kapadia)
Page 166 < [Sanskrit Text of the Ganitatilaka]
Page 129 < [Sanskrit Text of the Ganitatilaka]
Page 167 < [Sanskrit Text of the Ganitatilaka]
Ganita-sara-sangraha by Mahavira-Acharya (by M. Rangacharya)
Chapter 3 - Dvitiyah kalasavarnavyavaharah < [Part 2 - Sanskrit text]
Chapter 2 - Prathamah parikarmavyavaharah < [Part 2 - Sanskrit text]
Garga Samhita (English) (by Danavir Goswami)
Verse 4.19.6 < [Chapter 19 - A Thousand Names of Srī Yamunā]
Verse 1.6.21 < [Chapter 6 - Description of Kaṃsa’s Strength]
Verse 1.6.36 < [Chapter 6 - Description of Kaṃsa’s Strength]
A Descriptive Catalogue of the Sanskrit Manuscripts, Madras (by M. Seshagiri Sastri)
Bhakti-rasamrta-sindhu (by Śrīla Rūpa Gosvāmī)
Verse 2.4.237 < [Part 4 - Transient Ecstatic Disturbances (vyābhicāri-bhāva)]
Verse 4.8.53 < [Part 8 - Compatible & Incompatible Mellows (maitrī-vaira-sthiti)]
Verse 4.8.82 < [Part 8 - Compatible & Incompatible Mellows (maitrī-vaira-sthiti)]
Indian Astronomy (a source book) (by B. V. Subbarayappa)