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''Unsui'' ((日本語:雲水)), or ''kōun ryūsui'' () in full, is a term specific to Zen Buddhism which denotes a postulant awaiting acceptance into a monastery or a novice monk who has undertaken Zen training. Sometimes they will travel from monastery to monastery (angya) on a pilgrimage to find the appropriate Zen master to study with.〔Baroni, 365〕 ==Etymology== The term ''unsui'', which literally translates as "cloud, water" comes from a Chinese poem which reads, "To drift like clouds and flow like water."〔Snyder, 44-45〕 Helen J. Baroni writes, "The term can be applied more broadly for any practitioner of Zen, since followers of Zen attempt to move freely through life, without the constraints and limitations of attachment, like free-floating clouds or flowing water."〔 According to author James Ishmael Ford, "In Japan, one receives unsui ordination at the beginning of formal ordained practice, and this is often perceived as 'novice ordination.'"〔Ford, 55〕 According to the Oxford Dictionary of Buddhism,〔Dictionary of Buddhism, 316〕 the term ''unsui'' is also used for Therefore, the translation of itinerant monk found on several Japanese-English online dictionaries.〔Jim Breen's WWWJDIC〕〔Jeffrey Friedl's (Jeffrey's Japanese<->English dictionary server )〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「unsui」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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