| 释义 | 
		Definition of smriti in English: smritinounPlural smritisˈsmrɪtiˈsmridē A Hindu religious text containing traditional teachings on religion, such as the Mahabharata. 传承(印度教传统宗教教义经籍,如《摩呵婆罗多》) Example sentencesExamples -  ‘JUSTICE, being destroyed,’ Manu wrote in his famous smriti, ‘will destroy; being preserved, it will preserve; therefore, it must never be violated.’
 -  Smarta means a follower of classical smriti, particularly the Dharma Shastras, Puranas and Itihasas.
 -  The Dharma Shastras are smritis, written by men who had vested interests and enforced as laws.
 -  There are different views among Hindus about which scriptures are shruti and which fall into the other important category of sacred literature, smriti, that which is remembered or handed down.
 -  Neither shastras nor smritis suggest that there exists an immutable, universal moral doctrine.
 
 
 OriginFrom Sanskrit smṛti 'remembrance'. Rhymesbanditti, bitty, chitty, city, committee, ditty, gritty, intercity, kitty, megacity, nitty-gritty, Pitti, pity, pretty, slitty, spitty, vittae, witty    Definition of smriti in US English: smritinounˈsmridē A Hindu religious text containing traditional teachings on religion, such as the Mahabharata. 传承(印度教传统宗教教义经籍,如《摩呵婆罗多》) Example sentencesExamples -  Neither shastras nor smritis suggest that there exists an immutable, universal moral doctrine.
 -  There are different views among Hindus about which scriptures are shruti and which fall into the other important category of sacred literature, smriti, that which is remembered or handed down.
 -  The Dharma Shastras are smritis, written by men who had vested interests and enforced as laws.
 -  Smarta means a follower of classical smriti, particularly the Dharma Shastras, Puranas and Itihasas.
 -  ‘JUSTICE, being destroyed,’ Manu wrote in his famous smriti, ‘will destroy; being preserved, it will preserve; therefore, it must never be violated.’
 
 
 OriginFrom Sanskrit smṛti ‘remembrance’.     |