Dvesha
| Translations of Dvesha | |
|---|---|
| English | hatred, aversion, anger, hostility, ill will |
| Sanskrit | dveṣa (Dev: द्वेष) |
| Pali | dosa (𑀤𑁄𑀲) |
| Burmese | ဒေါသ |
| Chinese | 瞋(T) / 瞋(S) (Pinyin: chēn) |
| Indonesian | kebencian |
| Japanese | 瞋 (Rōmaji: shin) |
| Khmer | ទោសៈ, ទោស (UNGEGN: Toŭsăk, Toŭh) |
| Korean | 진 (RR: jin) |
| Tibetan | ཞེ་སྡང (Wylie: zhe sdang; THL: shyédang) |
| Thai | โทสะ |
| Vietnamese | Sân 瞋 |
| Glossary of Buddhism | |
| Part of Theravāda Abhidhamma |
| 52 Cetasikas |
|---|
| Theravāda Buddhism |
Dvesha (Sanskrit: द्वेष, IAST: dveṣa; Pali: 𑀤𑁄𑀲, romanized: dosa; Tibetan: zhe sdang) is a Buddhist and Hindu term that is translated as "hate, aversion". In Hinduism, it is one of the Five Poisons or kleshas.
Walpola Rahula translated it as "hatred", as did Chögyam Trungpa.