koan
English
editAlternative forms
editEtymology
editFrom Japanese 公案 (kōan), which was from Chinese 公案 (gōng'àn, “official business”).
Pronunciation
editNoun
editkoan (plural koans)
- (Zen Buddhism) A story about a Zen master and his student, sometimes like a riddle, other times like a fable, which has become an object of Zen study, and which, when meditated upon, may unlock mechanisms in the Zen student’s mind leading to satori.
- 1977, Thomas Hoover, chapter 1, in Zen Culture[2], →ISBN:
- Zen, with its absurdist koan, laughs at life much the way the Marx brothers did. What exactly can you make of a philosophical system whose teacher answers the question, "How do you see things so clearly?" with the seeming one-liner, "I close my eyes"?
- A riddle with no solution, used to provoke reflection on the inadequacy of logical reasoning, and to lead to enlightenment.
- 1973, Thomas Pynchon, Gravity’s Rainbow:
- Gibberish. Or else a koan that Achtfaden isn’t equipped to master, a transcendent puzzle that could lead him to some moment of light.
- 2001, Joyce Carol Oates, Middle Age, paperback edition, Fourth Estate, page 303:
- As always the koan “Why, Why am I here, why here” begins in her head, but she beats it back like a housewife with a broom.
- A therapy technique used by Traditional Chinese medicinal physicians or medical practitioners to break a presenting patients habitual pattern of thinking that has been diagnosed as the primary cause of an illness or disease.[1]
Translations
editzen story
riddle without solution
References
editAnagrams
editFrench
editEtymology
editBorrowed from Japanese 公案 (kōan), from Literary Chinese 公案 (gōng'àn, literally “public case”).
Pronunciation
editNoun
editkoan m (plural koan)
Further reading
edit- “koan”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.
Anagrams
editHungarian
editAlternative forms
editEtymology
editFrom English koan, from Japanese 公案 (kōan), from Literary Chinese 公案 (gōng'àn) (literally, "public case").
Pronunciation
editNoun
editkoan (plural koanok)
Declension
editInflection (stem in -o-, back harmony) | ||
---|---|---|
singular | plural | |
nominative | koan | koanok |
accusative | koant | koanokat |
dative | koannak | koanoknak |
instrumental | koannal | koanokkal |
causal-final | koanért | koanokért |
translative | koanná | koanokká |
terminative | koanig | koanokig |
essive-formal | koanként | koanokként |
essive-modal | — | — |
inessive | koanban | koanokban |
superessive | koanon | koanokon |
adessive | koannál | koanoknál |
illative | koanba | koanokba |
sublative | koanra | koanokra |
allative | koanhoz | koanokhoz |
elative | koanból | koanokból |
delative | koanról | koanokról |
ablative | koantól | koanoktól |
non-attributive possessive - singular |
koané | koanoké |
non-attributive possessive - plural |
koanéi | koanokéi |
Possessive forms of koan | ||
---|---|---|
possessor | single possession | multiple possessions |
1st person sing. | koanom | koanjaim |
2nd person sing. | koanod | koanjaid |
3rd person sing. | koanja | koanjai |
1st person plural | koanunk | koanjaink |
2nd person plural | koanotok | koanjaitok |
3rd person plural | koanjuk | koanjaik |
Volapük
editNoun
editkoan (nominative plural koans)
Declension
editdeclension of koan
Derived terms
edit- koanaf (“shellfish”)
Yola
editNoun
editkoan
- Alternative form of cooan
References
edit- Jacob Poole (d. 1827) (before 1828) William Barnes, editor, A Glossary, With some Pieces of Verse, of the old Dialect of the English Colony in the Baronies of Forth and Bargy, County of Wexford, Ireland, London: J. Russell Smith, published 1867, page 51
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