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The three meanings of novice are seeking silence, resting kindness, and diligence.
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Shami is translated as seeking silence, bai, and diligence, that is, stopping evil and doing kindness, and seeking the meaning of death. In the Buddhist Sangha, it refers to a man who has received the ten precepts, has not received full vows, and is over the age of seven and has not yet become a monk before the age of twenty.
Bhikshu, Buddhism refers to a monk who has received full ordination. Buddhism refers to a male monk who has attained the age of 20 and has received full ordination.
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They are all employees of the Buddha. Bhikshus are ordained, i.e., male employees who have signed a formal contract. Sand fans are interns.
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Shaman means diligent, resting, and purifying, and is a general term for non-Brahmanical religious sects and schools of thought Shami A monk under the age of twenty, commonly known as 'Little Monk'.
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The main differences between "novices" and "bhikshus" in Buddhism are:
1. Different ages.
A novice is a monk under the age of 20. A bhikshu is a man who has attained the age of twenty years.
2. The circumstances of ordination are different.
Novices are required to take ten precepts, and bhikshus are those who have received full vows.
Shami: A monk under the age of 20, commonly known as a 'little monk'. If a person wants to become a novice, he must take the Ten Precepts. Whoever is a child is called a novice. Furthermore, if a person has passed the age of 70, he is not allowed to take full ordination, he can only take novice ordination and become a novice, but he cannot officially become a bhikshu.
Bhikshu, a transliteration of the Sanskrit word bhiksu, is generally translated as "beggar", commonly known as "monk". Buddhism refers to a male monk who has attained the age of 20 and has received full ordination.
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Novices are unordained, but bhikshus are ordained.
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It is the name of a man under the age of 20 or other junior monks in Buddhism, and the novice is a Sanskrit word for a diligent man, saying that he should be diligent and encouraged by the monks; There is also the righteousness of mercy, which means that we should stop evil and do kindness. Its status is lower than that of a bhikshu. The corresponding female monks are called novice nuns.
Generally speaking, the little novice is also the meaning of the little monk.
The six are the eyes, ears, nose, tongue, body (tangible organs), and the mind (sensory organs); Pure means unpolluted. Yes, but there are no ripples or delusions in my heart because of the feelings I receive. It's not turning a blind eye and turning a deaf ear. To be able to truly achieve the six roots of tranquility, that is the realm of all Buddhas and Bodhisattvas.
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1. Novices.
The Chinese translation of Xi Ci, that is, the meaning of stopping evil and doing kindness, is also translated as diligence, that is, the object of diligence and encouragement by the great monks. There are three types of novices: seven to thirteen years old, and they are called novices, saying that they can only drive out black birds.
Between the ages of 14 and 19, the name should be a novice, which is in line with the status of a novice. Between the ages of 20 and 70, the name is novice, which means that at this age, he should have been in the position of a bhikshu, but he has not reached it, so he is still called the name of novice. Novices and novice nuns should take the Ten Precepts.
Second, the little novice.
A novice between the ages of seven and thirteen is a young novice.
3. The six roots are pure.
Because the novice has taken the ten precepts, the six roots are easier to purify.
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The youngest little monk.
The so-called novice, commonly known as "little monk", may be derived from the samane or sammir in the Qiuzi language, or the ssamana in Khotanese language. The meaning is to seek silence, rest mercy, and diligence, that is, to stop evil deeds and seek compassion, and to seek death. In the Buddhist Sangha, it refers to a man who has received the ten precepts, has not received the full vows, is over the age of seven, and has become a monk before the age of twenty.
Little novices. In the Buddhist Sangha, the first novice was Rahula. If a person wants to become a novice, he must take the Ten Precepts. Whoever is a child is called a novice.
If a person has passed the age of 70, he is not allowed to take full ordination, he can only take novice ordination and become a novice, but he cannot officially become a bhikshu. In the same way, the ordained woman is called a "novice nun". Novices and novice nuns become bhikshus and bhikshunis because they are diligent and motivated, so the former is translated as "diligent male" and the latter as "diligent female".
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It's a young monk.
Male monks who are less than 20 years old and who are still young enough to take the bhikshu ordination are called novices
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A practitioner who holds the "Ten Precepts of Novice".
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Novices are monks. The layman is in the family.
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