Table des matières

ama

āma

(1) adverbe (invariable) : oui, certes, assurément

Pali-English Dictionary, TW Rhys Davids, William Stede

āma (1) (indecl.) [a specific Pāli formation representing either amma (q. v.) or a gradation of pron. base amu° “that” (see asu),thus deictic-emphatic exclamn. Cp. also BSk. āma e. g. Av. Ś I.36] affirmative part. “yes,indeed,certainly” D.I,192 sq. (as v. l. BB.; T. has āmo); J.I,115,226 (in C. expln. of T. amā-jāta which is to be read for āmajāta); II,92; V,448; Miln.11,19,253; DhA.I,10,34; II,39,44; VvA.69; PvA.12,22,56,61,75,93 etc.

āma / āmaka

(2) adjectif : frais, cru, brut (non cuisiné, non arrivé à maturité)

Pali-English Dictionary, TW Rhys Davids, William Stede

āma (2) (adj.) [Vedic āma = Gr. w]mόs,connected with Lat. amārus. The more common P. form is āmaka (q. v.)] raw,viz. (a) unbaked (of an earthen vessel),unfinished Sn.443; (b) uncooked (of flesh),nt. raw flesh,only in foll. cpds.:°gandha “smell of raw flesh”,verminous odour,a smell attributed in particular to rotting corpses (cp. similarly BSk. āmagandha M Vastu III,214) D.II,242 sq.; A.I,280; Sn.241,242 (= vissagandha kuṇapagandha SnA 286),248,251; Dhs.625; and °giddha greedy after flesh (used as bait) J.VI,416 (= āmasaṅkhāta āmisa C.).

Dictionnaire Héritage du Sanscrit, Inria, Gérard Huet (dir.)

āma [agt. ca. am] a. m. n. f. āmā cru [«pas cuit»] | vert [«pas mûr»] (opp. pakva) — act. m. maladie || gr. ωμος