Chinese edit

phonetic day; sky; heaven
simp. and trad.
(忉利天)
 
Wikipedia has an article on:

Etymology edit

忉利 is typically understood to transcribe the numeral thirty-three from a historical Prakrit language; cf. Buddhist Hybrid Sanskrit त्रायस्त्रिंश (trāyastriṃśa); Pali tāvatiṁsa (of the thirty-three [heavenly beings]) from tayo m + tiṁsa; Gandhari 𐨟𐨿𐨪𐨩𐨟𐨿𐨪𐨁𐨭 (trayatriśa, belonging to the Thirty-Three);[1] Tocharian B tāpātriś; Tocharian A tapattriś; also modern Kashmiri تیٚیہِ ترٕٛہ (thirty-three). The first syllable may be compared to Ardhamagadhi Prakrit 𑀢𑀑 (tao, three). The /l/ reflex in (MC lijH) for Indo-Aryan -tr-/-dr-, probably echoing Gandhari features attested in e.g. 𐨕𐨂𐨫𐨒𐨹 (culaǵa, little) < Sanskrit क्षुद्र (kṣudra), also existed in loanwords such as 彌勒 (MC mjie lok) < Tocharian A Metrak (Bailey, 1946; Ji, 1998v11).

Alternatively, compare Sanskrit त्रिदिव (tridiva, third, highest heaven), from त्रि (tri) + द्यु (dyu); Pali tidiva; often conflated with the Thirty-Three in Buddhist texts.

Pronunciation edit



Rime
Character
Reading # 1/1 1/1 1/1
Initial () (5) (37) (6)
Final () (89) (15) (85)
Tone (調) Level (Ø) Departing (H) Level (Ø)
Openness (開合) Open Open Open
Division () I III IV
Fanqie
Baxter taw lijH then
Reconstructions
Zhengzhang
Shangfang
/tɑu/ /liɪH/ /tʰen/
Pan
Wuyun
/tɑu/ /liH/ /tʰen/
Shao
Rongfen
/tɑu/ /ljɪH/ /tʰɛn/
Edwin
Pulleyblank
/taw/ /liH/ /tʰɛn/
Li
Rong
/tɑu/ /liH/ /tʰen/
Wang
Li
/tɑu/ /liH/ /tʰien/
Bernard
Karlgren
/tɑu/ /liH/ /tʰien/
Expected
Mandarin
Reflex
dāo tiān
Expected
Cantonese
Reflex
dou1 lei6 tin1

Proper noun edit

忉利天

  1. (Buddhism) Trāyastriṃśa (a heavenly abode of the devas, second of the six heavens in the Realm of Desire)
    Synonym: 三十三天

Descendants edit

Sino-Xenic (忉利天):

References edit

  1. ^ Stefan Baums with Andrew Glass (2016) “trayatriśa”, in A Dictionary of Gandhari[1]