We are using cookies This website uses cookies in order to offer you the most relevant information. By browsing this website, you accept these cookies.
Did you know? You can double click on a word to look it up on TermGallery.
Meanings of religious mendicant in English
We have no meanings for "religious mendicant" in our records yet.
Usage of religious mendicant in English
1
A religiousmendicant should always wander over the Earth, sleeping where night overtakes him.
2
He was a friend of Duryodhana and stood there in the garb of a religiousmendicant.
3
Having put on the garb of a religiousmendicant, he seeks the good of his friend Duryodhana.
4
He was a byraghee, or religiousmendicant.
5
Let him, after becoming a religiousmendicant, behave in whatever way he pleases, without observing any restraint!'
6
He quittedthethroneto be a jogi, or religiousmendicant, and without communicating with any one departed into the jungle.
7
Fakīr (fakeer), a religiousmendicant.
8
There is an account of a religiousmendicant of the Jain caste who as a means of penance fasted for ninety-one days.
9
The religiousmendicant, wisely reflecting, is patient under cold and heat, under hunger and thirst,... under bodily sufferings, under pains however sharp.-Sabbasava-sutta.
10
Therefore, Janaka should resume his kingdom and practise charity; otherwise, religiousmendicants would be undone.
11
The residence of religiousmendicants seems to be especially discouraged, and we see no others.
12
The injunctions of their scriptures have always sufficed to maintain the poor, particularly their religiousmendicants.
13
Brāhmans or religiousmendicants are invited and fed.
14
The Beggars, excluding religiousmendicants.
15
The sort of piety, which once supported so great a multitude of religiousmendicants, is greatly on the decline in France.
16
Here we have the lowest stratum of the submerged tenth, excluding from them the religiousmendicants with whom we are not now concerned.