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Translations of Deva | |
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English | God, Deity |
Sanskrit | देव (deva) |
Pali | देव (deva) |
Assamese | দেৱ (Deo) |
Bengali | দেব (Deb) |
Burmese | နတ် (nat) |
Chinese | 天人 (Pinyin: tiān rén) |
Indonesian | Dewa (Male), Dewi (Female) |
Japanese | 天 (Rōmaji: ten) |
Khmer | ទេវៈ , ទេវតា , ទេព្ដា , ទេព (UNGEGN: Téveă, Tévôta, Tépda, Tép) |
Korean | 천, 天 (RR: cheon) |
Mongolian | тэнгэр (tenger) |
Sinhala | දේව (deva) |
Tibetan | ལྷ (lha) |
Thai | เทวะ , เทวดา , เทพ (thewa, thewada, thep) |
Vietnamese | Trời, thiên nhân, thiên giới |
Glossary of Buddhism |
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Buddhism |
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A Deva (Sanskrit and Pali: देव; Mongolian: тэнгэр, tenger) in Buddhism is a type of celestial being or god who shares the god-like characteristics of being more powerful, longer-lived, and, in general, much happier than humans, although the same level of veneration is not paid to them as to Buddhas.
Other words used in Buddhist texts to refer to similar supernatural beings are devatā ("deities") and devaputta ("son of god"). While the former is a synonym for deva ("celestials"), the latter refers specifically to one of these beings who is young and has newly arisen in its heavenly world.
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