- laity, it is also
tradition for the
deceased to
receive a
dharma name (戒名,
kaimyō; lit. 'precept name')
written in
kanji from the priest. This name supposedly...
- living. In ****an,
Buddhist families usually obtain a necronym,
called a
kaimyō, for a
deceased relative from a
Buddhist priest in
exchange for a donation...
-
ceremony differs slightly as the
deceased receives a new
Buddhist name (戒名,
kaimyō; lit. "precept name")
written in Kanji. This name is said to
prevent the...
- Sino-****anese on'yomi
reading of the same characters, the term was
originally a
kaimyō or
dharma name
given after death.[page needed] The
mizuko kuyō, typically...
- name
taken at the time of the Genpuku) was
originally Chūjirō, and his
Kaimyō (Dharma name) was Jo'un-sai ;
though he is
mostly remembered as Hyōgonosuke...
- non-royal
deceased person may be
given a
posthumous Buddhist name
known as
kaimyō but is, in practice,
still referred to by the
living name. In the Malay...
- or 法號 Simplified: 法名 or 法号 Pinyin: fǎmíng or fǎhào Ja: Kanji: 戒名 Rōmaji:
kaimyō Ko: Hangeul: 법명 Hanja: 法名 RR:
beopmyeong dhammavinaya The
dharma and vinaya...
- Ichiyōsai (歌川 一陽斎), Ichiyōsai
Toyokuni (一陽斎 豊国)
Posthumous Buddhist name (戒名 -
kaimyō / 法名 - hōmyō): Tokumyōin ****aireigō
Shinji In addition, the name 'Toyokuni'...
- Endon'in"). The
other two are the sangō and the jigō. The part of a hōmyō or
kaimyō (posthumous names)
ending in "-in". inzō* (印相) – a mudrā, or
Buddhist hand...
-
Buddhist Name" (あなたの声で呼ばれるとまるで戒名のようで,
Anata no koe de
yobareru tomaru de
kaimyō no yō de) "The
Beach Gets
Swallowed Up when the Tide
Comes In" (潮が満ちれば砂浜は呑まれるよ...