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TRUTH-TOR-I BRÂDAR-VAKHSH
591 order is the t., 44, +98; the best of by Mânûsk har, 24, 61; 47, II, true speeches is that which causes inn. no distress, 45, 290 sq.; 't.,' i.e. Tû Khiâo, mourning rites for his Buddhist religion, see Dhamma mother, 27, 153. See also Arstât, Rashnu, and Satya. Tû Khwai, the clever cook of Duke Truthfulness, see Truth.
Phing, 27, 179 sq. Truths, the Four Noble, viz. pain, Tûla, a demon harassing children, the origin of pain, the destruction 30, 219. of pain, and the eightfold holy way, Tû Lin, preserved parts of the Shû 10 (i), 52, 67, 67 n.; (ii), 132-45; King, 3, 9. 11, ix, 148-50 ard notes; 13, 95-7; Tulsidas, Râmâyan of, 34, cxxvii sq. 19, 177; 21, 172 sq., 185 ; 49 (i), Tûmâspa, n.p., 23, 221; Allzôbô, 175; those who understand the f. son of T., 47, 11. n. t. will not have to take the eighth Tuminga, see Aupoditeya. birth, 10 (ii), 38; the Bhikkhu must Tun, grandson of Count of Wei, 27, know the f. n. t., 10 (ii), 62 ; part of 120 ; son of Duke Âi, 27, 188. the original doctrine of Buddha, 11, Tungikâyana, n. of a gotra, 22, 287. xxi sq.; 13, xii; when these 13, t. are Tung-kwo Shun-zze, a Master of grasped and known the craving for the Tâo, teacher of Thien Zze-fang, existence is rooted out, that which leads 40, 42 sq., 42 n., 66 n. to renewed existence is destroyed, and Tung-kwo Zze, perplexed about the then there is no more birth, 11, 23 sq.; Tâo, 40, 66 sq., 292. 17, 104 sq.; four truths (dhammâ) Tung-kwo Zze-khî = Nan-kwo different from the f. n. t. (sakkâni), Zze-kbî, q.v. 11, 64 sq., 64 n.; were discovered Tung-pho, see Sû Shih. by Buddha alone, they were not Tung Wû, a Taoist teacher, 40, among the doctrines handed down, 103, 11, 150-2; by the knowledge of Tung-yê Kî recklessly drives his them, Buddha became free from re- exhausted horses, 39, 151; 40, 23, birth, 11, 152 sq.; and the Asavas, 23 n. 11, 294, 301; and doctrine of Tûra, Airya, and Sairima, the three Nidânas, 13, 75 n.; people acquire sons of Thraêtaona, 4, lix ; Frârâzi, the knowledge of the f. n. t. for the son of T., 23, 217. sake of Nirvâna, 21, 18, 80; attained Tûrak, n.p., 5, 135, 137. by the Act of Truth, 35, 182; if a Tura Kâvasheya, n. of a teacher, man does not attain to the percep 12, xxxi sq.; 15, 227; 43, xviii; tion of the f. n. t., his being born as built a fire-altar for the gods at a man was in vain, 35, 239; followed Kârotî, 43, 279 ; received teaching by the Bodisat for immeasurable from Pragâpati, 43, 404. aeons of the past, 36, 143; the Turanians, conflict between them antidotes made known by Buddha, and Naotaras, 23, 280 sq. and n.; 36, 217; in their triple order, in disputes between T. and Iranians, their twelvefold form, 36, 298. See 24, 52, 52 n.; 47, 135-7; there is also Buddhism (a).
hope even for the T. enemies of the Tryambaka, cakes sacred to, 30, Zarathustrians, 31, 133, 141, 141n.; 98. See also Rudra.
converts to Zoroastrianism, 31, 188. Tryaruna, worshipped at the Tar- Tûr-î Aûrvâîtâ-sang, n.p., 18, 413, pana, 30, 244; the son of Trivrishan, 413 n. a liberal lord, author of a Vedic Tûr-î Brâdar-vakhsh, or Brâdrôhymn, 46, 420 sq.
rêsh the Tûr, or Brâdrôk-rêsh, or Tû, younger brother of the duke of Brâd-rêsh, a Karap, enemy of Kâu, father of Hû, 3, 211.
Zoroaster, 5, 195 sq. and n. ; 47, Tubbâ'h, fate of the people of, 9, 20 n., 40-3, 143 sq.; one of the 219, 242.
seven heinous sinners, 18, 218, Tûg, son of Fredûn, 5, 133-5, 133 n., 218 n.; 37, 111, 11n.; slew Zara137; 37, 28; Salm and T. defeated tûst, 24, 267 sq., 267 n.; 47, 44 sq. n.,
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