See also: Vaidya

English edit

Etymology edit

Borrowed from Sanskrit वैद्य (vaidya).

Noun edit

vaidya (plural vaidyas)

  1. (India) A practitioner of ayurvedic medicine.
    • 1976, Charles M Leslie, Asian Medical Systems: A Comparative Study, page 37:
      Like the sannyāsī, the religious ascetic, moreover, the vaidya did not adhere rigidly to the stringent rules of ritual purity which regulated the lives of the ordinary members of the higher classes.
    • 1997, Kiran Nagarkar, Cuckold, HarperCollins, published 2013, page 98:
      ‘You lie down quietly and I'll run and tell the vaidya that it's nothing but a thorn in your foot.’
    • 1996, Mark Nichter, Mimi Nichter, editors, Anthropology and International Health: Asian Case Studies, page 243:
      If a prescribed sēva such as the feeding of Brahmans or the poor was not carried out by a patient, then the vaidya considered himself likely to be affected by the patient's karma.

Alternative forms edit