| 
		
		
		daan (दान) 
		See 
		
		
		dana. 
		
			
		
		回 
		 
		
		Dabchick 
		
		Another 
		name for the 
		
		Little Grebe. 
		
			
		
		回 
		
		da cau 
		(đá cầu) 
		
		Vietnamese. Name of the national sport of 
		 
		
		Vietnam, 
		in which players prevent a heavily weighted shuttlecock (fig.) 
		from touching the ground (fig.) by kicking it in the air (fig.) 
		using any part of their body, except the hands and forearms (fig.), with rules 
		similar to 
		
            
			takraw. Like 
		the latter, da cau may be played formally on a rectangular court and 
		over a net, as well as informally, with players standing in a circle (fig.). 
		In 
		
		
		China, 
		the game is called 
		
		jian zi. 
		
			
		
		回  
																													
					 
					 
					 
%20Sapa%209_small.jpg) 
		
		
		dado  
			 
			 1. The part of a pedestal between the 
            base and 
			 cornice. 
			
			
			回    
			 
            
			2. The lower part of a wall. 
			
			
			回  
			
			
			Daen Sukhawadih (á´¹ÊØ¢ÒÇ´Õ)    
Thai. 
‘Realm of Great Bliss’ or ‘Land of Great Bliss’. Name of a religious park 
		located on a large domain adjacent to Wat Phu Sawan (ÇÑ´¾ØÊÇÃäì), a 
		Buddhist temple in 
		
		Phetchaburi. 
		Sukhawadih is the Thai name 
		for 
			
			Sukhavati,
		the 
		western heaven of  
			 
			Mahayana 
			
			
			Buddhism
		 
			 
		guarded by 
			  
			 
			Amitabha, 
			one of the five transcendental or   
			dhyani buddhas. 
		The secluded, peaceful park, in some sources referred to as 
				
				Kuan Yin
		
		Bodhisattva Religious Park, offers a 
		perfect setting for
		
			meditation and contemplation. The 
		large domain is characterized as inter-religious, because it encompasses 
		various religious traditions, featuring multiple sections, each with 
		statues representing deities from a specific religion, hence drawing 
		from broader spiritual themes and reflecting a wider religious spectrum, 
		aligned with practices and concepts from
		
			dhamma-related traditions, 
		such as
		
			Buddhism, 
			
			
			Taoism, 
		and
		
				Hinduism. 
		The complex also has a museum dedicated to the Twelve Major World 
		Religions, i.e.  
			
			Christianity,
		
		
		Judaism, 
		
			Buddhism,
		
		
			Shinto,
		 
				
				Islam,
		
		
			
			
			Sikh,
		
		Confucianism, 
		
		
			Jainism,
		
		
				Hinduism,
		 
			
			
			Taoism,
		
		
			Baha'i, and
		
		
		Zoroastrianism.
		 
		
		
		WATCH VIDEO 
and 
VIDEO (EN). 
			
		
			回  
		
  
			
			
			Daen Thevada (á´¹à·Ç´Ò)   
Thai. 
‘Realm of the 
		
		
		Thevada’ 
		or ‘Divine Territory’. 
		Name of a tropical 
		forest garden and waterfall park in 
		
		      Chiang Mai's 
		Mae Taeng (áÁèáµ§) district. Its main attraction consists of a 
		spectacularly fashioned labyrinth-like tropical jungle with stunning  
		trees, artificial waterfalls, caves and tunnels, as well as turquoise 
		streams that meander through the complex, whilst an artificial fog 
		creates a somewhat fairytale-like atmosphere. In the back of the complex 
		is a shady 
		
		Zen 
		forest with a Japanese 
		style
		feel, featuring 
		paths lined with red lanterns, 
		
		Shinto
		
		
		
		torih 
		gates, and 
		curved pedestrian bridges made from wood. At the center of the complex 
		is a flower garden, whilst at the corners and edges are some retro 
		vintage style buildings with toilets, a market with food and souvenirs, 
		a coffee shop, and a restaurant. There is also a kids play garden, as 
		well as an animal section with child friendly pets, such as dwarf goats, 
		rabbits, and parrots (fig.). 
		Also transliterated Daen Thewada and Dantewada, and in English usually 
		referred to as ‘Land of Angels’. Compare with 
		
		
		Himaphan. 
		
		See also
		
		TRAVEL PICTURES and 
		
		
		WATCH VIDEO. 
		
			
		回   
		
%201_small.jpg)  
		
			
			dagob  
			
			See   
			
			dagoba. 
			
			
			回  
			
			dagoba  
			
			Singhalese term for a relic, shrine, 
			
            
			stupa or  
			
			 chedi.
            Also dagob. 
			
			
			回  
			
_small.JPG) 
			
			
			da hong se qiu zha (大紅色球扎) 
		Chinese. ‘Big 
		red pom-pom’ 
		or ‘large 
		red decorative ball’. 
		Term for a 
		decorative item typically used in Chinese rituals and celebrations, 
		consisting of a large red pom-pom made from fabric or ribbon. These 
		pom-poms are often tied around the necks or bodies of Taoist statues, 
		guardian lions, or other sacred objects in temples during festivals, 
		ceremonies, or other auspicious events. The red color symbolizes good 
		fortune, prosperity, and protection, and the pom-poms are used to honour 
		deities, invoke blessings, and enhance the spiritual energy of the 
		space. The practice of adorning statues with these pom-poms is a gesture 
		of reverence, renewal, and celebration, reinforcing the connection 
		between the divine and the material world. 
			
			 
			WATCH VIDEO, 
			
			
		VIDEO (M) 
			and 
			
			
		VIDEO (MT). 
			
			
			回  
			
		
 
		
			
			Daikoku (大黒)  
Name of the Japanese God of Wealth and 
	one of the 
	
	Seven Gods of Fortune worshipped in Japan. 
		
		
		
READ 
		ON. 
			
回 
			
			Daimyo Oak 
		
		See
		
		
		Japanese Emperor Oak. 
		
			
		
		回  
			 
			
		dairo  
			Japanese high priest. 
			Initially, the Japanese emperors had dual sovereignty, being both 
			monarchs and sovereign pontiffs under the title of Dairo, and in 
			fact worshipped by all their subjects as religious leaders, but 
			after a civil war in 1150 AD, when there were two competitors for 
			the throne, one assumed the ecclesiastical government, retaining the 
			title of Dairo, whereas the other became the secular emperor, with 
			the title Cubo, taking up absolute dominion over all civil and 
			military affairs, making the latter the real monarch, and the former 
			his high priest or dairo. From that time on, the dairo has been only 
			at the head of religious matters. 
			
			
			回  
		
		
		
		Dai Viet (Đại Việt, 大越)  
		Vietnamese-Chinese.
		‘Great 
		Viet’. The name of 
		
		Vietnam 
		from 1054 to 1400 AD and again between 1428 and 1804 AD, beginning with 
		the rule of Ly Thanh Tong (Lý Thánh Tông), the third emperor of the Ly (Lý) 
		Dynasty, who ruled between 1054 and 1072 AD, until the rule of Gia Long, 
		i.e. Nguyen Phuc Anh (Nguyễn Phúc Ánh), the first emperor of the Nguyen 
		(Nguyễn) Dynasty, who reigned from 1802 to 1820 AD. 
		In 1400 AD, 
		the founder of the Ho (Hồ) Dynasty, Ho Quy Ly (Hồ Quý Ly), had changed 
		the country's name to Dai Ngu (Đại Ngu, 大虞), though it was 
		renamed 
		Jiaozhi (Giao-chỉ, 交趾 or 交阯) when the area in 1407 fell under domination 
		of the Chinese Ming (明)
		Dynasty (1368 to 1644 AD), 
		which lasted until 1427 AD. Afterward, Le Loi (Lê Lợi), the founder of 
		the 
		
		
	Le 
		(Lê) Dynasty restored the kingdom as Dai Viet. Prior to
		1054, the Kingdom was known as 
		
		Dai Co Viet 
		(Đại Cồ Việt, 大瞿越), i.e. ‘Great Buddhist Viet’, 
		with Co (Cồ, 瞿) being derived from 
		
		Gautama (Cồ-đàm, 
		瞿曇). 
		
			
		
		回  
		
		dakdae (´Ñ¡á´é)  
		
		Thai 
		name for a chrysalis, especially that of a
		
		
		silkworm, i.e. the
    	
    silk pupa (fig.). A chrysalis 
		(fig.) is the stage in the life of certain insects 
		that go through a complete metamorphosis, known as holometabolism, and 
		which follows the larval stage. It is best known and typical for 
		butterflies, but there are also other insects that go through this 
		stage, such as certain beetles, flies, ants, fleas, bees, etc. The name 
		chrysalis derives from the Greek word chrysós (χρυσός), which means 
		‘gold’ and refers to the metallic 
		golden colouration found in the pupae of many butterflies. Also called (tua)
		
		
    mai. These pupae of 
		silkworms are fit for human consumption and considered a delicacy by 
		some. In China, they are even sold impaled on skewers at food markets, a 
		street snack known as  
		
		zha can yong 
		(fig.). 
			
		
		回 
			
  
		 
			
		
			dakini (डाकिनी)  
			Sanskrit. A 
			
        
		yogini 
			or female divinity of low rank in  
			 
			Vajrayana Buddhism.
			
			
			
			READ ON. 
			
			
			回  
			
			
			Daksha (दक्ष)  
			Sanskrit. 
			‘Able’, ‘competent’ and ‘intelligent’. Son of   
			
			 Brahma and usually associated with the idea of creative power. 
			Through his mother's side he is a one of the 
			
		
			
        
		Adityas. His consort is 
			
			
			Prasuti, 
			with whom he has thirteen daughters. After some sinful acts in which Daksha 
			mocked and dishonored a statue of his son-in-law 
			
			
            
			Shiva, 
			
			
			Sati, his daughter and 
			 
			Shiva's first consort, committed 
			suicide. This enraged Shiva, who created the ferocious 
			
			
			Virabhadra 
			(fig.) 
			and Rudrakali from 
			the locks of his matted hair, called 
          
          
        jata. 
			Together with 
			
			
			Bhadrakali (fig.), 
			who arose from the wrath of 
			
        Devi, 
			they set out to wreak mayhem in which Daksha was killed. Shiva, 
			however, later restored Daksha's life, with the head of a goat. 
			
			
			
			回  
		
		Dakshayani (दाक्षायनि)  
			
			Sanskrit. Another designation for  
			
			Sati,
			as the daughter of  
			
        
		Daksha.  
			
			
			回  
		
		Dalai Lama  
			
			Tibetan. 
			‘Ocean of Wisdom’. High priest of the Tibetan Buddhists, and from the 17th century AD until 1959 
            also worldly ruler of Tibet. In Tibetan Buddhism he is considered an 
			
		incarnation of the 
			 
			 bodhisatva  
			 
			Avalokitesvara. 
			
			
			回    
           
           
            
			
			
			dam (´Ó, ດຳ)  
			Both Thai and Lao term for ‘black’, 
			as well as for ‘to dive’ or ‘submerge’. 
			
			
			回  
			
			
			Dam Boonrit (´ÓºØÄ·¸Ôì)  
		Thai. Name of a legendary
		
		
		
		Poh Khun, 
		who is at Wat Thung Setthi (ÇÑ´·Øè§àÈÃɰÕ) in eastern 
		
			
			Bangkok's 
		Suan Luang District,  commemorated in a shrine together with 
		
		
		Thao
		
		
		Wetsuwan 
		(fig.), 
		the guardian of the North, 
		and 
		
		
		Thao
		
		
		Hiran (fig.), 
		an 
		
			
			asura 
		or demon considered to be a guardian angel to several royals of the 
		past, as well as to the present Princess 
		
			
			Sirindhorn. 
		See 
		also 
		
		TRAVEL PICTURE.
		
			
		回    
           
           
          _small.jpg)  
			
			
			
			dammar  
		Malay. ‘Resin’, ‘resin torch’ or 
		‘torch made from resin’. Name of a sticky substance gained from the 
		Dipterocarpaceae family of trees, such as the
		
		Taengwood Tree, 
		usually by tapping them. It has a variety of applications, including
		to make torches, as well as paraffin wax used in 
		
		
		      batik 
		(fig.). 
		Also known as dammar gum. 
			
		
		回  
			 
			Damnoen Saduak (ดำเนินสะดวก)  
			Thai. 
			‘Convenient progress’. Name of Thailand's longest straight man-made 
			canal,  as well as of a 
			 
			floating market 
			located in 
			
			Ratchaburi 
			Province. 
			
			
			READ ON. 
			 
			
			
			回  
		
			
		Damrong Rachanuphaap 
		(´ÓçÃÒªÒ¹ØÀÒ¾)
		  
		Name 
		of a 
		
	Krom Phraya, 
		who was 
		born on 21 June 1862 
		
         
		with the name Disuan Kumaan (´ÔÈÇáØÁÒÃ), and as the 57th son of King
		
		
    Mongkut.
		
		
		
		READ ON. 
			
		
		回  
		
		damselfly  
		
		See
		
		
	malaeng poh. 
		 
			
		
		
		回  
		
		dana (दान)  
		
		Sanskrit-Pali.
			
		‘Generosity’,  
		
		a term on a par with the Thai word
			
			
			tamboon, i.e. the practice of merit 
		making by giving, especially in religious context, both in
		
		
		      Hinduism and
		
		
		Buddhism. 
		Sometimes transcribed dahna and also pronounced daan or dahn. 
			
		
		回  
		
		
		dan bau (đàn bầu)  
		
		Vietnamese. ‘Gourd string 
		instrument’. An acoustical instrument, 
		consisting of a trapezoidal sound box with a single string stretched 
		lengthwise along the body of the soundboard and a movable bridge with a 
		wooden handle or tremolo bar.  
		
		READ ON. 
		  
			
		
		回 
			
			
			Dancing Plant 
		Common designation for a tropical 
		plant or shrub found in South, East and Southeast Asia, that –like 
		Mimosa pudica (fig.) 
		and the carnivorous Venus Flytrap– is capable of rapid movement, i.e. 
		movement that is visible with the naked eye. However, rather than being 
		moved by sunlight or on contact, the movement of its small, linear leaves 
		is triggered by sound. And so, when exposed to music, it will move its 
		leaflets in concert, seemingly making them dance, hence the name. This 
		plant produces small, purple flowers, and reproduces using seeds. It has 
		the botanical names Desmodium gyrans, Codariocalyx motorius, Hedysarum 
		motorius and Meibomia gyrans, among a few others, and is also commonly 
		known as Telegraph Plant and Semaphore Plant, referring to the movement 
		of the leaves, which is reminiscent to the movement of the adjustable 
		paddles of the semaphore telegraph. In Thai it is referred to as choy 
		nang ram (ªé͹ҧÃÓ). 
			
		
		回   
			
			
			Dandadhara (दण्डधार)  
			Sanskrit. 
			‘Rod-bearer’ or ‘wielder 
			of the sceptre’. A name given to  
			 
			Yama, the god of death. 
			Interestingly, the word danda (दण्ड), 
			also means 
			‘punishment’ and as such the name can also be translated as ‘he who 
			exerts punishment’. 
			
			
			回  
			 
			
			Dangrek (ดงเร็ก)  
			Sandstone mountain range on the border of Cambodia 
            and Thailand, which ends dramatically on a cliff 
            overhanging the Cambodian plains. Here the ancient 
			 
			 
			Khmer temple  
			   
			 
			Khao Phra Wihaan is situated at a height of 657 meters above sea 
              level. The mountain range also features ancient Khmer rock carvings and near  
			 
			Surin province 
                it houses the  
			
			 Prasat Ta 
                  Meuan temples. In Thai the mountain range is 
			referred to as Phu 
                    Khao Phanom Dongrek.
			
			
			See 
			MAP.
			
			
			
			回    
			 
            
			
			
			Danu 
			(ဓနု)  
		Name of an ethnic minority group
		of Tibeto-Burmese 
		descent, living in 
		
		
		Myanmar (fig.), 
		i.e. mainly in the area near the Pindaya Caves (fig.) 
		in southern 
		
		Shan State. 
		There are currently an estimated 100,000 people belonging to this tribe, 
		and they are listed as a subgroup of the Bamar. The name Danu derives 
		from the word donake, which translates as 'brave archers', and is hence 
		related to the Thai word Thanu (¸¹Ù), which means ‘bow and arrow’. It is 
		said that in the 16th century the Danu were archers in the army of King 
		Alaungpaya, and settled in the Pindaya area after they returned from 
		wars in Thailand. Today, they are a agricultural people (fig.) and speak 
		Burmese, with a slightly different accent, described as an archaic 
		dialect of Burmese, and usually wear Burmese costume, though on special 
		occasions they might wear traditional  
Shan-style dress (fig.). 
		
			
		
		回  
            
			  
          	 
          	 
          %20Pindaya_small.jpg)  
			
			
		Dao  
		
		Name 
		for the  
		
		Yao people 
		in 
		
		Vietnam, one of the 54 ethnic groups officially 
		recognized by the 
		Vietnamese government, and which are also known as 
		 
		
    Mien. Many speak the 
		 
		
        Iu 
		Mien language, while others 
		speak other languages and dialects. With a population of just under half 
		a million, the Dao (pronounced Dzao) are the 9th largest ethnic group in Vietnam, with 
		several subgroups. In 
		Vietnam, the  female  traditional 
              attire is indigo or black, with colourful embroidery, which like 
		the headdress, differs in each of the subgroups, with 
		
		
		a great 
		diversity across Northern Vietnam. For example, 
		the 
		Red Dao in 
		Sapa wear a black loose pair of trousers, that is richly embroidered 
		with flower or star-like patterns, 
		and  a 
		black  
		 
		jacket trimmed with embroidery, 
		whilst on the head they wear a red turban-like piece of cloth, whereas 
		the Dao of other subgroups and in other regions may wear a less 
		colourful or much simpler outfit, with a different kind of headdress, 
		which usually is either predominantly red or black, whilst the heads of 
		the Dao Dau Troc women from the Lang Son and Thai Nguyen regions is 
		completely shaven and covered by a distinctive bonnet in mostly indigo 
		and red. In Vietnamese usually referred to as nguoi Dao (người Dao). 
		 
		
		
		回  
		  
           
           
            
			 
		dao prajam wan (ดาวประจำวัน)  
			Thai. ‘Celestial body per 
			day’.  System 
            in Thailand in which each day of the week corresponds with a certain planet, 
              moon or sun, that is, the Sun for Sunday, the Moon for Monday, Mars for Tuesday, 
              Mercury for Wednesday, Jupiter for Thursday, Venus for Friday and Saturn for 
              Saturday. In Thai planets are often named after these days, e.g. Venus  is 
			‘Dao Phra Suk’ and Friday is called ‘Wan Suk’. See also  
			wan tua,   
          
          thep 
            prajam wan,
            
	                
	                
                    Phra prajam wan,    
			 
			sat 
                prajam wan and  
			 
			sih prajam wan. 
			
          
			
			WATCH VIDEO (E). 
			
			
			
			回  
		
		dao reuang (´ÒÇàÃ×ͧ)   
		Thai. ‘Glowing star’. Name for an ornamental plant 
		that can grow up to one meter tall and with the botanical name Tagetes erecta. It bears 
		globular orange flowers, though also other cultivars, such 
		as plants with yellow flowers, exist. The plant originates from Central 
		America and is commonly known as Mexican marigold, though it is also 
		referred to as Aztec marigold and occasionally it may even be called African marigold. The plant 
		is cultivated commercially for multiple purposes, including medicinal 
		use, and in Indian culture the flowers are widely used in the making of 
		garlands (fig.), both for decorative and ceremonial purposes (fig.). 
			
		
		回   
		  
           
           
          _small.jpg)  
			
		
		dara (´ÒÃÒ)  
		Thai for ‘star’. 
			
		
		回  
			
			
			Dara Radsami (´ÒÃÒÃÑÈÁÕ)  
		Thai. Name of a royal consort of 
		King   
    
    Chulalongkorn. 
		She was the daughter of King 
		Phra Chao Inthawichayanon 
		(¾ÃÐà¨éÒÍÔ¹·ÇÔªÂÒ¹¹·ì) 
		of 
		
                
              Lan Na, 
		during the time that it was still an independent state. In 1883, amidst 
		rumours that Queen Victoria wanted to adopt the princess in a British 
		attempt to take over the Kingdom of Lan Na, 
		
			      	
			      Rama V 
		proposed an engagement to Dara Rasami, to become his concubine. Hence, 
		in 1886, she left 
		
		      Chiang Mai 
		to enter the 
		
	      
	Grand Palace 
		in 
		
		Bangkok, 
		where she lived for 23 years, until the king's death, after which she 
		returned to her hometown in Chiang Mai, where she remained for the rest 
		of her life. Being a supporter of rose cultivation, with a great 
		affection for English roses, she was one day given a big hybrid, a 
		thorn-free pink rose with a soothing scent. This rose became her 
		favourite and she started to cultivate them in the 
		garden of her palace, naming it Chulalongkorn Rose (fig.), 
		after her late husband, who was born on a Tuesday, that 
		has pink as its colour according to the 
			      
			      
			      sih prajam wan 
		system. The princess was born 
		on 26 August 1873 and died on 9 December 1933. Her full name and title 
		is 
		Chao Dara Radsami Phra 
		Ratcha Chaya (à¨éÒ´ÒÃÒÃÑÈÁÕ ¾ÃÐÃÒªªÒÂÒ), 
		and she is also referred to as Princess of Chiang Mai. See also 
		
			      
			      
			      dara
		and 
			      
			      radsami. 
		Also transliterated dara ratsami. 
		
		回  
		
		
		
		dararat (´ÒÃÒÃѵ¹ì)  
		Thai designation for the Narcissus 
		or Daffodil.  
		
		READ ON. 回  
		
			
		darbas  
			General name for destructive demons, such as the 
			 
			 
			Rakshasas, 
			sometimes translated from Sanskrit as  
			‘tearers’. 回  
			
			dargah  
			A Muslim mausoleum or shrine. 
			
			
			回  
			
			
			Dark-brand Bushbrown  
		Common name for a species of butterfly 
		in the subfamily Satyrinae, i.e. the browns, and found in parts of Asia, 
		including in Thailand.  
		
		READ ON.
			
			
			
		
		回  
			
			Dark Evening Brown  
		Common name for species of butterfly, with the scientific name Melanitis 
		phedima and of which there are several subspecies, including Sahyadri 
		Dark Evening Brown (Melanitis phedima varaha), Satpuda Dark Evening 
		Brown (Melanitis phedima bethami), West Himalayan Dark Evening Brown (Melanitis 
		phedima galkissa), Bengal Dark Evening Brown (Melanitis phedima bela), 
		Myanmarese Dark Evening Brown (Melanitis phedima ganapati), and the 
		Formosa or Japanese Dark Evening Brown (Melanitis phedima oitensis). 
		Though the underwings are often dark, varying from a greyish-brown to 
		amber-orange (fig.) or purplish-chocolate ground-colour 
		with a   
		
		number of usually whitish 
		 ocelli, colouring, shades and patterns of the wings 
		do vary substantially per species and some are actually paler (fig.), 
		whilst others are reminiscent of certain darker wet-season forms of the
		
		
		
		Common Evening Brown
		
		(fig.). 
		Several of the above mentioned (generally female) subspecies have a 
		dark, blackish spot, located centrally on the underside of the hindwing. In Thai, the Dark Evening Brown is known as 
		 
		
		phi seua 
		sahyan sih tahn mai 
		
		(¼ÕàÊ×éÍÊÒÂѳËìÊÕµÒÅäËÁé), i.e. ‘burned brown 
		evening 
		butterfly’. 
		
		
			
		回   
			
_small.jpg)  
			
			
			Dark-horned Lantern-fly  
		Common name for  a species of planthopper. 
		 
		
		
		READ ON. 
			 
			 
			
		
		回  
		
		
		Dark-sided Flycatcher  
		Common name for a species of passerine 
		bird, with the scientific designation Muscicapa sibirica.  
		
		READ ON. 
		 
			
		回  
		
		
		Dark-necked Tailorbird    
		Common name for a species of 
		
		songbird bird in the family 
		Cisticolidae, and with the scientific designation 
		Orthotomus atrogularis. It 
		occurs from the region of the Indian subcontinent to Southeast Asia, 
		including in 
		
		Thailand, 
		where it is known as
		
		nok krajib kho dam. 
		It is similar to the  
Common Tailorbird (fig.), 
		but has a faintly streaked lower face, a dark streaked throat and upper 
		breast, as well as some yellow at the shoulders and a yellow vent. The 
		top of the head is 
		rufous, 
		akin to the face of
		
		
		Ashy Tailorbirds (fig.).
		See 
		also 
		
		TRAVEL PICTURE.
		
			
		回   
          	 
          	 
          %201_small.jpg)  
			
			Dark-throated Thrush  
		Common name for a rare species of passerine bird in the thrush family, 
		with the scientific designation Turdus ruficollis, and of which there 
		exist two races, i.e. Turdus ruficollis atrogularis, which is commonly 
		known as
		
		
		Black-throated Thrush (fig.), 
		and Turdus ruficollis ruficollis, which is commonly referred to as 
		  
		
		
		Red-throated Thrush. 
		These large thrushes have a plain grey back and rufous-buff underwings, with 
		the male adult of the race Turdus ruficollis atrogularis having a black 
		throat and upper breast, often speckled, whilst the male adult of the 
		race Turdus ruficollis ruficollis has a brick-red throat and upper 
		breast, and rufous colouring in the tail. Females and young birds lack 
		the identifying bib of adult males, with females of the race Turdus 
		ruficollis atrogularis having a black-streaked side-throat, and black 
		scaled mottling on the upper breast, whereas females of the race Turdus 
		ruficollis ruficollis have dark streaks on the side of the throat and on 
		the chestnut upper breast, as well as a whitish submoustachial. The bill 
		of both races is pale yellowish, with a dark tip. In Thai, this species 
		is generally known as
		
		
		nok deun dong kho khem, whereas the two 
		races may be specified as
		
		
		nok deun dong kho dam for Turdus 
		ruficollis atrogularis, and  
		
		nok deun dong kho daeng, 
		for Turdus ruficollis ruficollis. 
			
		回  
		
			
		
			Daruka (दरुक)  
			1. Sanskrit. Name of a demon, 
		also known as Darukasura, i.e. the 
			
		      
		      asura 
		Daruka, used a boon 
		given by 
		      
		      
              
		      Brahma 
			to torment the world. When the 
		suffering became unbearable, 
			
			
            
			Shiva 
			created 
		      
		      
		      Bhadrakali 
			(fig.)
			from his 
			
			      
			      third eye 
		and she killed the demon. 
			
			回  
			  
           
          	 
            
			
			2. Sanskrit. The charioteer and companion of  
			 
			Krishna, 
            who attended him in his final days. 
			
			
			回 
			
			
			
			Daruma (だるま) 
		Japanese. Name for a round, 
		Japanese, traditional doll, modeled after
		
				Bodhidharma, the founder of the
		
		    
		    Zen 
		sect of 
		      
		      
		      Buddhism, 
		and also known as 
		      
		
		      Dharma Doll.
		
		
		
		READ ON. 
		 
			
		
		回  
		 
			
			
			darwaza (दरवज़ा)  
			Hindustani-Hindi. ‘Door’ or 
			‘gateway’. The word is the same in Kashmiri and Urdu where it is written in Nastaliq 
			script, rather than the 
			 
			
			Devanagari script of Hindustani and Hindi. 
			In Sanskrit it is known as douar, dwar or dvar and in Urdu it is 
			also known as darwaazeh. Compare with 
		      
		      
		      dvarapala. 
			
			
			
			回  
			
			
			
			dastar (ਦਸਤਾਰ)  
		Punjabi. Name for the 
		
			
			compulsory 
		turban worn by 
			
			
			
			Sikh, often 
		over a 
				
              
				
				patka, a
		 
		scarf-like 
		single 
		piece of cloth or 
		under-turban 
		(fig.). 
		It is sometimes transliterated dastaar and may also 
		be referred to by its Hindi 
		name 
			      
					
					pagri. 
		
			
		
		回  
		
			
			Dasharatha (दशरथ)  
			
			Sanskrit. Father of   
			
			Rama, king of   
			
			 Kosala in the   
			 
			Ramayana, the Indian and 
            original version of the  
			
			 epic.
              In the Thai version, the   
			 
			Ramakien,
                the father is called   
			
			 Totsarot but he is 
                  also known as  
			 
			Suddhodana. 
			Also transcribed Dasaratha. 
			
			
			回  
			
		Datch 
		Nih
			Kwahm Suk Muan Ruam (´Ñª¹Õ¤ÇÒÁÊØ¢ÁÇÅÃÇÁ)  
		
			Thai for ‘Gross Happiness Index (GHI)’. See
		
		
		Gross Domestic 
		Happiness Index.  
			
		
		回  
			
			Datch Nih
			Kwahm Suk Muan Ruam Pai Nai Phrathet (´Ñª¹Õ¤ÇÒÁÊØ¢Ï)  
		
			Thai for ‘Gross 
		Domestic Happiness Index
		(GDHI)’. 
		
			
		
		回  
		
		Datch Nih
			Kwahm Suk Muan Ruam Prachachaht (´Ñª¹ÕความสุขÏ)  
		
			Thai for ‘Gross National Happiness Index (GNHI)’. See
		
		
		Gross Domestic 
		Happiness Index.  
			
		
		回   
			
			Dawadeung (ดาวดึงส์)  
			
			Thai name for the    
			 
			Tavatimsa heaven. 
			
			
			回  
		
			
		Daw Gyam Phaya Su (ဒေါ်ဂျမ်းဘုရားစု)    
		Burmese. ‘Lady Gyam 
		
		
			      
		
			      Pagoda 
		Group’. Name of a 
		brick 
		monastery in 
		      
		      
				
				
				Inwa.
		
		
		
		READ ON.  
			
		
		回  
			
			
			dbu rgyan  
		 
		Tibetan.  ‘Crown’ or ‘head ornament’. 
		 Name for the Buddhist Ritual 
		Crown.
		 
		
		
		READ ON. 
		 
		
			
		
		回  
		
			
			Death Railway 
             
			Designation for the Thailand-Burma 
			Railway built by the Imperial Japanese Army during WW II.
			
			
			READ ON.
			
            
			回  
			
			
			Decho (à´âª)   
			
          	Thai. Name of a 
		
				legendary 
		
		Khmer 
			envoy with the title 
		of
          
		
		
		Phraya, who 
		the Khmer emperor sent to
          
		
				
				Lavo
		in order to arrest 
		the later
          
			
			Sukhothai
		King
          
          
          Phra Ruang, as 
		the wit of this then 
		tributary ruler of Lavo was 
		deemed a danger to the power of the Khmer sovereign. Decho, the 
		antagonist in this famous folk tale is sometimes described as an 
		assassin, who was sent to kill rather than to arrest Phra Ruang. According to legend, Decho 
		was able to travel underground by using magic powers and was hence 
		nicknamed 
		
				
				Khom Dam Din, 
		i.e. ‘Ground submerging Cambodian’. 
		However, when he emerged to 
		deliver the Khmer King's message, legend says that he was turned into 
		stone by Phra Ruang 
		
		
						
		See also TRAVEL PICTURE.
			
            
			回  
			
			
			deepastambha (दीपस्तम्भ)  
			Sanskrit. ‘Lamp house’ 
			or ‘lighthouse’. A free standing 
			tower in front of a temple in India, also called manastambha (मनस्तम्भ) 
			and oftentimes somewhat reminiscent of a 
			
			
            
			pagoda. See 
			also 
			
			dipa. 
			 
			
			
			回  
          
			
			deer Of this four-hoofed grazing 
          animal in the family Cervidae, of which males usually have antlers, there are seven species found in Thailand, i.e.
			
			
			Burmese Brow-antlered Deer (fig.),
			
			
			Siamese 
			Brow-antlered Deer (fig.),
			
			
			Hog Deer (fig.),
			
			
			Sambar Deer (fig.), 
			Schomburgk's Deer and two kinds of
							
							
							Barking Deer (fig.), 
			i.e. Common Barking Deer and Fea's Barking Deer. Species can best be 
			distinguished by their size, colouration and the shape and size of 
			the male's antlers (fig.). 
			When represented in Buddhist art (fig.),
          deer usually refer to
          
          
          Mrigadava,
          the deer park where the  
          
			
		      Buddha delivered his first sermon, and in 
			
			
			Myanmar, 
			deer hide is used by gold beaters (fig.) 
			as a wrapper in 
			the production of 
          
			
			
			gold leaf
			(fig.), 
			used mostly as a Buddhist religious offering. In 
          mythology, it is the mount of 
           
			
          Phra Phareuhadsabodih,
          the god of Thursday (fig.), 
			and of 
           
			
			
			Ajita, 
			one of the eighteen
		      
		      arahats
			(fig.). In Thai, 
			deer are either called 
           
          kwahng or 
           
          mareuk (for males) and
          
          mareuki 
			(for females). In Chinese, a deer is known as lu (鹿) and is a symbol 
			for longevity, as well as a homonym for good fortune (祿). In South 
			
			
		      China 
			it is pronounced liu, the same as the number six (六), which 
			refers to heaven, earth and the four directions. 
			
			See also THEMATIC 
			STREET LANTERN (1), 
			
			 
			(2), 
			
			 
			(3) 
			and 
			
			 
			(4).  
			
			
			回 
          
          
           
          
			
			dek thong (à´ç¡·Í§) 
          Thai. ‘Golden kid’. Thai name for the Chinese 
			Immortal Golden Boy
			
			
			Jin Tong. 
			 
			
			
			回 
          
			
			dek wat (à´ç¡ÇÑ´) 
          Thai. ‘Temple kid’. Term for young boys that live 
			on the premises of a Thai temple and do minor household jobs for the 
			monks and novices. In the past, the reason for becoming a temple kid 
			was mainly to obtain a basic education, as it was often the only 
			form of schooling available to upcountry peasants and it even used 
			to be an obligatory requirement for attaining any higher education. 
			Since the creation of the governmental school system the number of 
			dek wat has declined sharply. Temple kids are traditionally no 
			younger than eight years old and many of them are later ordained as 
			novices. They can often be seen at the rear end of a row of monks 
			and novices that are on alms begging round, to help carry the 
			surplus of collected food offerings. 
			
			
			回 
            
            
            
            _small.jpg)  
			
			Delacour's Langur   
Common name for a 
species of Leaf Monkey or Lutung, with the scientific 
name Trachypithecus delacouri. 
 
		
		READ ON. 
 
			
回  
		 
			
			Democracy Monument  
			Monument in 
			
			
			Bangkok commemorating the change from an 
            absolute to a constitutional monarchy in 1932. 
			 
			
			
			READ ON.
			
			
			
			
			回 
			
			
			Demoiselle Crane
			  
		Common name for a species of 
		
		
		
		crane, 
		with the scientific designations Grus virgo and Anthropoides virgo. They 
		have a mostly blackish head and head-sides, with long black feathers on 
		the lower neck and breast. They have a grey crown, that runs centrally 
		to the back of the nape, where it joins with the long white post-ocular 
		tufts. Otherwise, they are mostly pale grey, apart from black under-tail 
		feathers. Their eyes are reddish-brown, the bill is pale with dark grey 
		at the base, and their legs and feet are greyish-black. To escape the 
		cold winters in  
		
		China, 
		Demoiselle Cranes fly some 3,000 kilometers non-stop in seven days, 
		crossing the  
		
        
		Himalayas into India, where 
		around 9,000 birds will stay for 6 months, many of them wintering in the 
		Thar Dessert. In Thai, this bird is 
		known as  
		
		nok krarian 
		lek.
		
			
		
		回  
		 
		 
           
          %20¹¡¡ÃÐàÃÕ¹àÅç¡%202_small.jpg)  
		
		den 
		(đền)  
			Vietnamese. A temple of a deified hero in 
			 
			
			Vietnam. 
			It is likely etymologically related to the Chinese term  
			
			dian, which in 
			
			
			Mandarin 
			is phonetically very similar in its pronunciation. See also 
		
			
        chua. 
			
			
			
			回  
			
			dengue  
			West Indian Spanish from Swahili. Name of an infectious 
            tropical viral fever transmitted by mosquitoes, i.e. Aedes aegypti, 
			in Thai known as
			
			yung laai bahn, 
			and Aedes albopictus, in 
			Thai called
			
			yung laai suan. Infection is characterized by severe pain 
            in the joints and muscular pains. Symptoms also include a high fever. Dengue is 
            also known as dengue fever and 
			
			by the epithet break-bone fever. To counter 
			the spread of the disease, that has no vaccine nor a real cure, the 
			government fights the problem at its source, i.e. by attacking the 
			mosquitoes. They do this with a public 
			information and warning campaign, as well as by destroying the 
			mosquitoes and their larvae by spraying toxic fume. Since it are 
			only the females that bite, scientists are considering releasing 
			male genetically modified mosquitoes in the wild, which are 
			programmed to suppress the females, i.e. when GM males mate with 
			females, the latter would automatically die as a consequence. In Thai it is called  
			 
			khai sah. See also
			
			
			 
			haemorrhagic fever,
			
			
			Chikungunya, 
			and 
			
			malaria. 
			
			
			
			回 
			
			
			Deng Zhong (邓忠) 
		Chinese. Name of a 
		character featured in the Ming (明) dynasty novel Fengshen Yanyi 
		(封神演義), which translates to ‘Investiture of the Gods’ or ‘Canonization 
		of the Gods’. 
		
		READ ON. 
			
			
			
			回  
		 
			
			dentil  
			
			A small tooth-shaped
			block used as part of a  
			 
			cornice. 
			
			
			回  
		
		Den Quan Thanh (Đền Quán Thánh)  
		Vietnamese 
		name of a 
		      
              
		      den, i.e.
		a 
		temple dedicated to a deified hero, in Hanoi. 
		 
		
		
		READ ON. 
		
			
		
		回  
			
		
			
			Department of Corrections  
			See 
		 
		
		
				krom rachathan. 
			 
			
			
			回  
			
			
			Department of Lands  
			See 
		 
		
		krom thih din. 
			 
			
			
			回  
			
			
			Department of Land Transport  
			See 
		
	Krommakaan Khonsong Tahng Bok. 
			
			
			回  
		
		Department of National Parks, Wildlife and Plant 
		Conservation  
		Thai agency under the 
		Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment, with its headquarters in 
		the capital
		
			Bangkok. 
		
		 
		READ ON.
		
		
		回  
			
			
			Department of Science Service  
		
			See 
		
		krom withayahsaat borikaan. 
			
		
		回  
		
								
								
		
		
		Desert Rose  
		Common name for a showy flowering plant 
		
		(fig.), with the botanical name Adenium 
		obesumin. Though this evergreen originates from the Middle East and the 
		regions of northern Africa, it is also commonly found in Southeast Asia, 
		where it is used in 
		
		penjing (fig.) 
		and
		as a popular houseplant (fig.). It has a swollen basal stem, which in botanical 
		jargon is known as a caudex; clustered leathery leaves, that are 
		arranged spirally; and variously pink to red, funnel-shaped flowers, 
		with a whitish blush at the centre, that may extend outwardly on the 
		petals (fig.). It has a toxic milky sap which in certain places in Africa is 
		used as an arrow poison for hunting. It belongs to the family Apocynaceae, which also includes the Plumeria or 
		      
		      
		      frangipani. 
		In Thai, this plant is called
		
		chuan chom, which literally means ‘to 
		invite admiration’ and ‘attractive’. In English, this plant 
		is 
		also known with a variety of other common names, including 
		Impala Lily and Sabi 
		Star, among others.
		
			
		
		回  
		  
           
           
          _small.jpg)  
		
		
		Dentata Ruby  
		See 
 
baan mairoo rohy farang.
		
			
		
		回  
		
	
		
		deuan (à´×͹)  
		Thai for ‘month’ or ‘lunar 
		month’, as well as 
		for ‘moon’. 
		
		
		READ ON.
		
			
		
		回  
		 
			
			deuay (เดือย)  
			Thai name for a plant of the genus 
			Coix lachrymajob, 
            of the family Gramineae. It has white seeds, called Job's tears, which are gained from its hard flower buds and 
              are edible (fig.). 
              It is an important economical crop in the province of  
			 
			
			
	Loei. In English known as tear grass. Also ton deuay. 
			
			
			
			回  
			 
			 
           
             
			
			deul  
			Term 
			for the residence or dwelling place of a deity, that is the 
            main shrine in a Hindu temple. 
			
			
			回 
			
			
			deun ka-lah (à´Ô¹¡ÐÅÒ) 
		Thai. ‘Coconut
		walking’. Name of a 
		traditional Thai children's game, that utilizes a pair of 
		
		
		
		coconut 
		shells, known in Thai as 
		
		
		ka-lah.
		
		
		
		READ ON. 
		 
			
		
		回  
		 
			
		dev, deva 
			(देव)  
			Sanskrit. ‘Deity’. In 
			
			Buddhism, the term refers to a superhuman 
			being or god of an undetermined rank. They are believed to 
            be thirty three in number, eleven for each of the three worlds of Buddhist 
            cosmology. In 
			
		      Hinduism, it 
			refers to any 
			god or benevolent supernatural being. However, the term is 
			etymologically related to the Persian word daeva as appears in 
			the oldest texts of the Zoroastrian canon, where it refers to ‘wrong 
			gods’ or ‘false gods’, i.e. ‘gods that are to be rejected’, as well 
			as to the English term divine. Both in
			
			Buddhism and
			
				Hinduism, the devas are 
			understood to be the opponents of the 
			
			
			asuras, 
			i.e. the nature gods. See also 
			
			
			mandir. 
			
			
			回   
			
			Devadatta (देवदत्त)  
			Sanskrit. 
			Name of a son of King Suppabuddha and his wife Pamita, who was an 
			aunt of 
			  
			 
			Siddhartha. Since he was also the brother of
			
			
			
			Yashodhara, he was both a 
			cousin and brother-in-law of the   
			
			 
			Buddha. He was an evil monk who, 
			unable to attain any stage of sainthood, became 
			jealous and plotted to harm the Buddha. 
			
			He first attempted to kill the 
			Buddha by hiring a man to kill him. The murderer would than be 
			killed by two other men, who in turn would be killed by four other 
			men, who finally would be killed by eight other men. But the cunning 
			plan failed as all the murderers, upon coming close to the Blessed 
			One, scared out and took refuge in him. Devadatta then tried to kill 
			the Buddha himself by hurling a huge stone at him, during a climb on 
			Vulture's Rock, but the Buddha got only hurt on his foot. In his 
			third attempt, Devadatta made a 
			fierce 
			man-killer  
			
	elephant, known as
			
			
    
	Nalagiri, drunk with toddy and set it loose to charge the 
			Buddha, who though calmed the elephant by radiating his loving 
			kindness (fig.). Devadatta eventually died failing in his wicked plan and 
			sincerely regretting his wrongful actions. In Thai he is known as
			
			Phra Thewathat. 
			
			
			回  
			
			
			Devanagari (देवनागरी)  
		
		Sanskrit. Literally ‘divine city’, 
		a term derived from the words 
		
        deva and 
		
    nagara. It is 
		the name 
		for the alphabet used to write different languages of the Indian 
		subcontinent, including Hindi,
		 
		
			Sanskrit, 
		
            Pali, etc. Its script is 
		recognizable by a distinctive horizontal line that runs along the top of 
		the letters, linking them together. It is written from left to right 
		using an abugida writing system in which each letter represents a 
		consonant that carries the inherent vowel ‘a’, whilst all other vowels, 
		or the absence of vowels, require either modification of these 
		consonants or have their own symbol. Also called simply Nagari.  
		 
		
		See also  
		
		
		DEVANAGARI SCRIPT. 
			
		
		回  
		
  
			
			devaputra (देवपुत्र)  
		Sanskrit. 
		
		Devas, 
		male flying, heavenly creatures. In Pali called devaputta. 
			
		
		回  
			
			
			devaputta  
			
			Pali term for  
			
			devaputra. 
			 
			
			
			回   
			
			devaraja (देवराज)  
			
			Sanskrit. 
			‘King of the gods’. A title often applied to both   
			
			 Indra and the   
			
			 Buddha. In 
            Java and Cambodia, a cult of devaraja developed that claimed the king was 
            an emanation of a god and would be reunited with that god after death. 
			
			
			回   
			
			
			devata (देवता)  
			Sanskrit. A female deity in Cambodian art. 
			
			
			回  
			
			Devawongse Varopakarn (à·ÇÐǧÈì 
			Çâû¡ÒÃ)   
		
		Thai. 
		Name of a son of 
		King  
		
		
		
	Mongkut 
		and the Father of Thai Diplomacy.  
		
		READ ON. 
		 
			
		
		回  
		
			
			devi (देवी)  
			Sanskrit. A goddess of undetermined rank, 
			though if used in plural, it usually refers to all the gods, often 
			in contrast to the 
			
		      
		      asuras or 
			demons. 
			
			
			
			回  
			 
			
			Devi 
			(देवी)  
			
			Sanskrit. Title given to   
			
			 Parvati, 
            the  
			 shakti or consort of   
			
			 Shiva, 
			and a goddess with many forms, both good and bad. Her good forms are  
			 
			
			Uma 
			‘light’, 
			Sati ‘the 
                virtuous one’, 
			 
			 
			Annapurna 
			‘the one who bestows good 
                  deeds’,   
			
			 Haimavati 
			‘born of the 
			 
			 Himalayas’,   
			
			 Jagamata 
			‘mother of the world’, and  
			 
			Bhavani 
			‘the female creator’. Her terrible forms are  
			 
			Durga 
			‘inaccessible’ (fig.),   
			
			Kali,  
			
			 Mahakali (fig.) or  
			
			Shyama 
			‘black’,   
			
			 Chandi 
			‘fierce’, 
			
		Chamunda, and
			 
			 
			Bhairavi 
			‘terrible’. Her mount is 
                    the 
			 
			lion. 
			
			
			回    
			 
          _small.jpg) 
			
			
			
			Devil's Backbone 
			See 
			
			sayaek daang. 
			
			
			回 
			
			
			Devi Mahatmyam (देवीमाहात्म्यम्) 
			Sanskrit. ‘Majesty of the goddess’. Name of a 
			 
			
              Hindu
			 
			religious text, that describes the victory of the goddess 
			
        Durga  
			 
			over the 
			
			buffalo
			 
			demon 
			
	Mahishasura (fig.). 
			The manuscript, composed around 400-500 AD, is one of the 
                    
                    Puranas. 
			Though the event of  
Mahishasuramardini 
			is also 
			found in the 
			
			
	      Mahabharata, in 
			the 
			latter 
			Mahishasura is slain by   
			 
			Skanda.
			A ritual 
			reading of the Devi Mahatmyam is part of the annual celebrations of
			 
			
	      Navaratri. 
			The 5th chapter also relates the story of the demons
			
			Sumbha 
			and 
			
			Nisumbha. 
			
			
			回 
			
			
			
			Dhaka topi (ढाका 
			टोपी) 
		
		Nepali name 
		for 
		a type of brimless hat (topi), 
		which is part of the Nepalese national dress (fig.). It is named after the type of design and 
		fabric it is made of, i.e. Dhaka, which in turn is named after the 
		capital of Bangladesh, where the typical design of the print originated 
		from. 
		
		Also known as 
		 
		
		
		
		Nepali topi.
		
		
			
		
		回  
		  
           
           
          ,%20Nepalese%20traditional%20hat_small.jpg)  
		 
			
		dhamma  
			
			Pali-Thai. The term can be translated as 
			‘right principles’, ‘scruples’, ‘rectitude’, ‘law’, ‘truth’, ‘reality’ or 
			‘righteousness’. In  
			
			 Theravada Buddhism, it 
			refers to the teachings 
                  of the   
			
			 Buddha as 
                    found in the  
			 
			Tripitaka. It is part of the   
			 
			Trairat, together with the 
                      historical 
                      Buddha and the   
			
			 Sangha. 
			It is often transcribed with a capital letter and in   
			
			 Sanskrit spelled  
			 
			dharma. In Thai   
			
			 tam, 
              but when it refers to the Pali word it is pronounced   
			 
			 
			thamma, 
			and when on it own often as dham or tham, 
			as in 
	
			      
	Sala 
			Dham (fig.). The Sanskrit term dharma is sometimes translated as ‘cosmic order’. 
			
			
			回   
			 
             
			
			dhammachakka
			  
			
			
			1. Pali. Buddhist ‘Wheel 
              of Law’ (fig.) that symbolizes the ongoing cycle of cause and effect in ones life, known as  
			 
			kam (karma) and 
			resulting in 
                perpetual reincarnation. This cycle can only be broken by reaching  
			 
			nipphaan (nirvana). The 
			‘Wheel of Law’ also symbolizes the   
			
			 Buddha's first sermon held in the 
			
			
			deer park at  
			 
			Sarnath, setting in motion his philosophy.
                    The turning of the wheel symbolizes the teachings of the Buddha which are spread
                    endlessly, and if portrayed with eight spokes it symbolizes the   
			
			 Eightfold 
                      Path. The dhammachakka 
			is also a classic
			
			
			mandala 
			form, with its inner truth radiating out in all directions.
                        If portrayed with twenty-four spokes, as in the
			 
			
			Asoka pillar (fig.), it 
			represents 
			the hours in a day, whereas with 32 spokes, the sum of 
			eight and 24 
			spokes, 
			represents 
			the 
			
			
			
			lakshana, 
			i.e. the 
			
			32
			
			major marks 
			
			of a   
			
			 Buddha 
			as 
			
			described in Buddhist 
			literature. In art sometimes depicted with the presence of one 
			(fig.) 
			or more 
			
			
			deer 
			(fig.), 
                          and in Thailand it stands centrally on the Buddhist flag
                          (fig.). 
			The dhammachakka 
			is the idiosyncratic mark of
			  
						
						Yama, the Vedic god of death, 
			who 
						wears it as an ornament on his breast (fig.). 
			In   
			 
			Sanskrit, 
			the language of 
			
			Mahayana
			
			
			Buddhism, 
			the dhammachakka is 
			known as 
			
			dharmachakra 
			(fig.) 
			and takes a somewhat different form than the dhammachakka in 
			
			      
			      Theravada 
			Buddhism, i.e. at the outer edge at the end of each of the 
			eight spokes, is often a 
			
			
	lotus 
			bud, or another ornament, such 
			as a 
			
			wishing gem, sometimes even in 
			groups of three at ends of the horizontal and vertical spokes, 
			making the shape of the Mahayana dharmachakra reminiscent to that of 
			a ship's wheel. 
			At the centre of the wheel is often an 
			
			
			ananda-chakra 
			(fig.). 
			It is one of the eight auspicious symbols or
			
			
			Ashtamangala 
			and is sometimes called the Wheel of Life. 
    
			
	See also THEMATIC STREET LIGHT 
			(1), 
			
			(2), 
			
			(3), 
			
			(4) 
			and 
			
			 
			(5). 
			
			
			回    
           
             
			2. Pali.  
			A      
			
			 mudra meaning the 
			‘turning of the   
			 
			Wheel 
            of Law’, at which the    
			
			 
			Buddha's
			 
			thumb and forefinger 
              of either hand form a circle, with the remaining fingers curving outward. 
			Often, the middle finger of one hand is left stretched upward, while the other 
			fingers are slightly curved, which refers to the Buddhist 
			 
			
	Middle Path. A 
              similar variant is known as  
			
			 vitarka, 
			i.e. ‘exposition’, in which one or two hands are held up forward. Both mudras 
			refer to the Buddha's 
                first public discourse on Buddhist doctrine given to five ascetics or  
			 
			panjawakkih in a  
			 
			
			deer park in 
			  
			
			 Sarnath, India. In iconography, often depicted in combination with the 
			‘Wheel of Law’ (fig.). 
                    However, artists and sculptors not always 
			strictly follow the 
			iconographic rules and hence over time and 
			through space, 
			sometimes inconsistencies in the hand and finger positions as 
			described above, may occur (fig.). 
			 
			
			If two hands are used, then the  
			thumb and index finger of one 
			hand form a full circle, i.e. with the thumb and index finger touching 
			one another, whilst the thumb and middle finger of the other hand form an 
			open circle, i.e. with the thumb and middle finger not touching, whilst all the other fingers of both hands point upward. 
			Whereas the three fingers represent ignorance, greed, and anger, 
			the circle represents  
			      
			      
			      samsara, 
			i.e. the 
			
			perpetual cycles of birth, 
			aging, death and rebirth, 
			accompanied by suffering. 
			In such case, the hand with the closed circle explains that one cannot break the
			
			
			perpetual cycles of birth, 
			aging, death and rebirth if one still is attached to those three 
			evils, i.e.  
			
			ignorance, greed, and anger, whilst  
			
			the hand 
			with the open circle means that one can break out of samsara,  
			once one is free of these three evils, which can 
			be done by following the Buddhist 
			
			
	Middle Path, 
			i.e. the path of no 
			extremes, avoiding emptiness and an acceptance of things as they 
			are, which in Buddhist 
		      
		      
		      iconography
			is often, as in 
			this mudra, 
			represented by the use of the middle finger. In   
			 
			Sanskrit, 
			known as dharmachakra. 
			
			
			回   
			  
			
			
			Dhammakaya 
		Name of a Thai Buddhist tradition 
		founded in the early 20th century by 
	
			
			Luang Poo Sod 
			(fig.), 
		the abbot of
																								
			Wat Pahk Nahm Phasi Chareun (fig.) 
		in  
			
			Bangkok.
		The tradition teaches 
		and meditates on the principle that the 
		
		atman, 
		the concept of a universal soul or 
		spirit, 
		i.e. the true self of the Buddha is present within all beings and 
		connected with 
		
	nirvana. 
		This belief is rejected by the majority of the Thai 
			
			Theravada 
		community, who have criticized it as contradicting the Buddhist doctrine 
		of 
		      
		      anatta, 
		i.e. the non-ego, 
		non-soul, or not-self, which 
		is one of the most 
		fundamental points in Buddhism which states that all existence and all 
		worldly phenomena eventually have no substantial reality. 
		In Thai known as 
		
		Thammakaay. 
			
		
		回   
			
			dhammapala  
			
			Pali. 
			‘Defender of the Buddhist law’. In  
			 
			Vajrayana Buddhism they wage war 
            against the demons and enemies of the faith, and have terrifying appearances. In 
			  
			 
			Sanskrit dharmapala. 
			 
			
			
			回  
		
		
		dhammaracha  
		Pali. ‘Righteous monarch’. Buddhist ideology of classical kingship in 
		which the selfless king (racha) 
		who, though being a powerful world ruler (chakravartin), 
		governs justly by the right principles of the
		Buddhist code (dhamma).  
		To do so, he must uphold ten kingly virtues, i.e. (in Pali) dana  
		 
		(generosity, charity); sila (morality, a high moral 
		character); pariccaga (sacrifice everything for the good of the people); ajjava (honesty and integrity); maddava (kindness and gentleness); tapa 
		(restraint, austerity in habits); akkadha (avoidance of and freedom from 
		hatred, ill-will, enmity); avihimsa or 
		
        
		ahimsa (non-violence); khanti (patience, forbearance, 
		tolerance, understanding); and avirodha (conciliation, non-opposition, 
		non-obstruction). Those are akin to the ten merits or
		
		totsabarami 
		which the  
		
		Buddha embodied before attaining 
		 
		
	Enlightenment. Also transcribed dhammaraja 
		and in Thai thammaracha (¸ÃÃÁÃÒªÒ).  
		
		See also POSTAGE STAMP.  
			
		
		回  
		
		
		Dhammasoka (ဓမ္မသောက)  
		Burmese 
		 name 
		for the Indian-Mauryan 
		Emperor  
		
		Asoka. 
		 
			
		
		回  
                
				
Dhammayangyi Phaya (ဓမ္မရံကြီးပုထိုး)   
				Burmese. ‘Delight of 
		Righteousness 
		
		Pagoda’. 
		Name of the largest of all temples in 
		      
		      Bagan. 
				
		
		READ ON.  
			
				回  
		
		
		Dhammayazika Phaya (ဓမ္မရာဇိကဘုရား)   
				Burmese.  ‘Pertaining 
		the Righteousness King 
				
				Pagoda’ 
		or  ‘Pertaining the King 
				of Law 
				
				Pagoda’. 
				Name of a Buddhist temple in 
		      
		      Bagan.
				
		
		
				READ ON.  
			
				回  
		
		
		
		Dhammayazika Zedi (ဓမ္မရာဇိကစေတီ)   
				Burmese.  Another name 
		for
		
		Dhammayazika Phaya, using the noun 
				
		
		    
		Zedi 
		rather than 
		            
					
					Phaya, 
		yet both referring to a 
				
				pagoda or
		
			      
			      stupa, 
		though these two designations may in Burmese also refer to both the 
		tower-shaped structure itself, as well as the entire temple complex. 
				 
			
				回  
		
		
		Dhammayutika
		   
		
		Pali. ‘Group adhering the   
		 
			dhamma’. Name of a 
		Buddhist sect belonging to the Thai  
		
		
			Sangha and which in Thai is called
		
		
		Thammayut.  
			
		
		回  
		
		
		Dhammazedi (ဓမ္မစေတီ)  
		Pali-Burmese-Mon. 
		Name of 
		the 16th ruler of the
		
		Hansawati Kingdom, who succeeded Queen 
		Shin Sawbu and reigned from 1471 to 1492 AD.  
		
		READ ON. 
		 
			
		
		回  
		
		
		Dhanapala (धनपाल)  
		Sanskrit-Pali. ‘Wealth Protector’, but in Sanskrit also ‘Begging Bowl 
		Receptacle’. Another name for the elephant
		
		
    
	Nalagiri, that attacked the Buddha when he was on alms round and 
		hence carried an   
		
		
		alms bowl (fig.). 
		 
			
		
		回  
			
			
			dhanu (धनु)  
		
		Sanskrit for ‘bow’. See  
		
		dhanus.  
			
		
		回  
			
		
			Dhanus (धनुस्)  
			
			Sanskrit. 
			‘Bow’. The mighty bow that surfaced during the churning of the 
			 
			 
			Ocean of Milk and was given to 
			    
			 
			Vishnu's
			  
			 
			avatar, 
			  
			
			Rama. 
			Sometimes transcribed Dhanush and also known as  
			
			
			dhanu, of which the Thai word for bow, 
			i.e. thanu (¸¹Ù), derives. See also  
			
		
		
		kaan ying thanoo 
			and 
			
			
			
			
			Indradhanus. 
			
			
			
			回  
		
		
		Dharani (धरणि, धरणी)  
			Sanskrit. Goddess of the earth, who witnessed the accumulated merits 
			of the   
			 
			 Buddha, during his confrontation with 
			 
			
			 Mara, just before his 
			 
			 
			Enlightenment. In Thailand known as 
			 
			 
			Mae Phra Thoranee. 
			In Thai, the name Dharani is pronounced  
			 
			 
			Thoranee 
			and refers to the personification of the earth. The word dharani is 
			related to the Sanskrit root dhR (धृ), 
			which means  ‘to hold’ or ‘to 
			maintain’. As such, 
			Dharani is sometimes interpreted as ‘one 
			that is sustained by earth’. 
			Also transcribed 
			Dharanee or Dharanih, 
			and sometimes called Brah Dharani.  
			
			
			
			回  
		
		
		dharani 
		(धारणी)  
			Sanskrit.   
			The word dharani 
			derives from the Sanskrit root dhR (धृ), 
			which means  ‘to hold’ or ‘to 
			maintain’, and literally translates as ‘that which supports’. 
		It is a collection of sacred formulas, a type of ritual speech similar 
		to    
		
    	mantras. They are considered to protect the 
		one who chants them from harmful influences and misfortune. Also 
		transcribed dharanee, dharanih, dhaaranee or dhaarani.  
			
		
		回  
			
			
			dharma (धर्म)  
			
			Sanskrit for   
			 
			dhamma, i.e.
			 the teachings of the   
			
			
			 Buddha 
			in 
			
			 Theravada Buddhism, 
			and sometimes translated as ‘cosmic order’. In 
			
		      Hinduism, 
			Dharma is the god of virtue, justice and morality, as well as of 
			politics. In the  
	      
	      Mahabharata 
			episode on the  
	      
			
			
			Pandava 
			Tribe,
			this deity is associated with 
			(or known as) the god  
		      
		      
		      Yama,
			 
			the Vedic god of death, where he is 
			the the heavenly father of
			
			 
			
			 
			Yudhishthira 
			with 
Kunti.
			
			
			
			回  
			
			
			dharmachakra (धर्मचक्र)  
			
			Sanskrit for   
			 
			dhammachakka. 
			 
			
			
			回  
			
			
			dharmapala (धर्मपाल)  
			
			Sanskrit for   
			 
			dhammapala. 
			 
			
			
			回 
			
			
			Dharma Rain 
		See 
			
		
		Fayu. 
			 
			
		
			回   
			
			
			Dharmasastra (धर्मशास्त्र)  
			
			Sanskrit. Ancient book of the law in 
			
			
		      Hinduism. In Thai 
			 
			
			Thammasat. 
			 
			
			
			回 
			
			dhwaja stambha (ध्वज स्तम्भ) 
		Sanskrit. ‘Banner 
		pillar’. 
		Name for a kind of flag-mast of a deity in an 
		Indian temple, used 
		during festivities, when it is decorated with 
		different types of flags to commemorate and celebrate that particular 
		event (fig.), and said to be a spiritual medium between heaven and earth. It is 
		a very common feature in most of the Indian temples, erected in a 
		straight line from the main deity, just before the
		
		
        
		vahana of that deity, which is 
		also in the same axial line. This tall, post-like structure is usually 
		made of metal, or of stone with a metal covering, and has three 
		horizontal boards and three vertical bars at the top. It is also 
		associated with the Royal Banner or victory banner,  
		one of the 
		
		
		Ashtamangala,
		
		which symbolizes charity and the incorruptible official, as well as the 
		Buddha's victory over
		
		
		Mara, known as
		
		
		maravichaya, with Tibetan tradition 
		having eleven different forms of this banner, representing the eleven 
		levels of the  
		
		World of Desire. 
		Also transliterated dhvaja stambha.
		
		
		回   
           
           
          %20BKK_small.JPG)   
			
		
			dhyana (ध्यान)  
			
			1. Sanskrit for   
			 
			Zen. 
			 
			
			
			回   
			2. Sanskrit.  
			An 
            advanced stage of  
			
			
	meditation, in 
			
			Pali known as 
			
			jhana. 
			
			
			
			回  
			
			
			dhyani (ध्यानि)   
			Sanskrit. 
			‘Concentration’.  
			A commonly 
            seen     
			
			 mudra signifying 
			‘meditation’ with the     
			 
			Buddha
			   
			seated in half or 
              full lotus position with both hands resting on his lap, palms up and the right 
              hand on top. 
			In the  
			
	                
	                
                    Phra prajam wan system 
                this Buddha image correspondents with Thursday. Also called 
			  
			 
			samaddhi. 
			 
			
			
			回   
			 
            
			
			dhyani buddha  
			Sanskrit. According to 
			 
			 
			Mahayana Buddhism there are five 
            transcendental   
			 
			buddhas, 
            four for the 
            main directions and one for the zenith. They are often shown on
			
			
    mandalas and are usually 
			portrayed seated in 
            meditation, the most popular being  
			 
			Amitabha, 
            the buddha of the western paradise, who in mandalas has a red complexion 
			(fig.) 
			and either performs a
			
			
        
		dhyana   
			
			 mudra 
			or holds a   
			
		
		
	lotus. 
			The others are
			 
              
	          Vairochana (fig.), the principal buddha, 
			who is white, may hold a wheel and is placed in centre of the other 
			four dhyani buddhas; 
			 
		
Akshobhya, the buddha of the East, who has a 
			blue complexion (fig.), 
			may hold a  
			
	vajra or scepter, and whom is sometimes 
			confused with  
			
						
						Bhaisajyaguru, 
			the Medicine Buddha (fig.);
			
			
			Ratnasambhava, the transcendental 
			buddha of the southern universe, who has a yellow or golden 
			complexion (fig.), 
			performs a  
			  varada
			  
			
			 mudra, and 
			on mandalas may hold a  
			
			chintamani jewel; and 
			 
			
			Amoghasiddhi, 
			the buddha of the North, who has a green complexion (fig.), 
			is seated whilst performing an
        
        
			
			abhaya
			
			
    mudra with his right 
			hand, and on mandalas usually holds a 
			visvavajra, i.e. 
			a double vajra (fig.). 
			Also known as the 
			 
			
			
			Five Great Buddhas 
			or the 
			Five 
			
			Jinas. 
			 
			
			
			回  
			
			dian 
			(殿)  
		Chinese for ‘palace hall’, but also often translated as ‘temple’. 
			
		
		READ ON. 
			 
			
		
			回  
			
			
			Dictamnia rugosa  
		Latin. Scientific name for a species 
		of
		Long-horned Beetle.
		
		
		
		READ ON. 
		 
			
		
		回  
			
			
			Digambara (दिगंबर)  
			
			Hindi-Sanskrit. One of the two important sects of 
			 
			 
			Jainism, 
			whose followers consist of only males and whom live their lives 
			completely naked, whereas male disciples of the other sect, called Svetambara, 
			do wear at least a loincloth. The latter sect may also include 
			females devotees.
			
			
			
			
			回  
			
			
			dihbook (´ÕºØ¡)
			  
		Thai for ‘tin’, a metal of which 
		Asia is the biggest producer in the world, with forerunners in Southeast 
		Asia being 
		
                
	            Malaysia, 
		Indonesia and 
		
			      Thailand, 
		where it is found especially in southern Thailand. A tin mine features 
		on the provincial emblem of 
		Phang Nga
		 
		
		(fig.), 
		as well as on a postage stamp issued in 1969 promotion tin export from 
		Thailand (fig.), 
		whilst quarry-men mining for
		
		tin are depicted on the emblem 
		of  
		
 Yala 
		 (fig.) 
		and on a Thai postage stamp issued in 2012 to commemorate the 150th anniversary of 
		
			Ranong 
		(fig.). 
		Though since the eighties, tin production declined dramatically, 
		Thailand still has an estimated reserve of about 170,000 tonnes. Tin 
		toys, which were publicized on a set of six Thai postage stamps issued 
		in 2010, are in Thai known as khong len dihbook (¢Í§àÅ蹴պء), but are 
		usually referred to as khong len sangkasih (¢Í§àÅè¹Êѧ¡ÐÊÕ), i.e. ‘zinc 
		toys’ (fig.), 
		of which each item is usually described more specifically according to 
		its kind, e.g.
		
		reua sangkasih, i.e. ‘zinc boats’, 
		which are in Thai also called 
		
		reua pokpaek (fig.); 
		wind-up toys, such as animals, called 
																														
					sat lomkheun sangkasih 
		(fig.), 
		and tricycle boys, known as dek 
		saamloh sangkasih (fig.); etc. Also 
		transcribed deebook or deebuk. 
			
		
		回   
			
		dikka  
			A 
			term in architecture for a raised platform around an ablution tank, 
			as well as a raised platform on a column of a 
			
	mosque, 
			from which prayers are chanted and the
			
			
	Koran is 
			recited by the  
			
        imam. 
			 
			
			
			回  
			
			
			dikpala 
			(दिक्पाल)  
			Sanskrit. One of the eight listed guardians of the main and intermediate 
            directions of the sky, who protect the world from demons. They are often 
            depicted on Hindu temples facing different directions. Four dikpalas are 
            guarding the cardinal points and another four the intermediate directions. 
			
			
			回  
			
			
			dilok (´ÔÅ¡)  
		1. Thai for 
		‘pinnacle’ or 
		‘excellent’. 
			
		
			回  
			2. Thai for 
		
			
			tilaka. 
			
			
			回  
		
			
			dim sam (ดิ่มซำ)  
			Chinese-Thai. Name for round chunks of a soft bread-like 
            steamed dough filled with either savory or sweetmeat. They are made from wheat 
            flower and are traditionally steamed in small round
			
			bamboo 
            baskets called   
			kheng (fig.). 
            Often spelled dim sum and in Thai called  
			 
			sala pao. 
			 
			
			
			回  
			 
           
             
			
			dim sum (ดิ่มซำ)  
			See  
			 
			 
			dim sam. 
			
			
			
			回   
			
			din daeng (ดินแดง)  
			
			Thai. 
			‘Red earth’, ‘red soil’. Name sometimes used for   
			
			 laterite, 
			though officially laterite is called
			
			
			sila laeng. 
            See also   
			 
			sila daeng. 
			 
			
			
			回  
			
			ding 
			(鼎)   
		Chinese. ‘Vessel’. Name for a type 
		of ancient Chinese cooking cauldron with two looped handles and standing 
		upon three or four legs, reminiscent of some types of 
		
		
		
		incense burner (fig.), 
		yet with a lid. There exist two forms, i.e. round vessels with three 
		legs and rectangular ones with four legs. They were used for cooking, 
		storage of food and wine, as well as for ritual offerings to the gods or 
		to ancestors. They are one of the most significant type of vessels used 
		in Chinese ritual bronzes and are often used as a symbol for authority 
		and the quest for power, e.g. whereas the term ding ding (鼎鼎) means 
		‘great’ or ‘very important’, the Chinese saying wen ding (问鼎), means ‘to 
		aspire to the throne’. 
			
			
			
		回  
		
		
		Dingy Swallowtail   
		Another common name for the 
		 
						
						
						Lime Swallowtail.  
			
		
		
		回  
		
			
			
		dinh 
			(đình)  
			Vietnamese. Village communal house composed 
            of two parallel wings and often decorated with a 
			
			
              
		      dragon, unicorn,  
            
			
			phoenix and 
            
			
			tortoise, the four animals 
			from Chinese paradise, associated with happiness, 
			though those might also consist of a tortoise,
			dragon, 
			
			hongse
			or (red) phoenix, and a (white) 
			
			
			
			
			tiger. The dinh is where 
            the guardian spirit of the village resides, and is a place of private worship as 
            well as public ceremonies. In some ways it can be compared with the Thai 
			 
			 
			sahn lak 
              meuang. 
			 
			
			
			回  
			
			
			Dinh Bo Lin (Đinh Bộ Lĩnh, 丁部領)  
			Vietnamese-Chinese. Name of the 
			first independent Vietnamese emperor following the liberation of the 
			country from the rule of Imperial 
		      
		      
		      China
			in the late 10th 
			century AD. 
			
			
			READ 
			ON.  
			
			
			回  
			
			
			Dinh Tien Hoang (Đinh Tiên Hoàng, 丁先皇)  
			Vietnamese-Chinese. ‘First Dinh 
			Emperor’. Posthumous name for the first Vietnamese emperor
			
			Dinh Bo Lin, 
			used after his death and deification. In this name a temple in
			
			
				Hoa Lu, 
			near Truong Yen Thuong village in Ninh Binh Province,
			
			is dedicated to this emperor. The city of Ninh 
			Binh also has a large bronze statue of this emperor (map 
			- 
			
			fig.).
			
			
			See 
			MAP.  
			
			
			回  
			
			
  
			
			din yipun (ดินญี่ปุ่น)  
			
			Thai. 
			‘Japanese clay’. A colourful sticky substance that is 
            capable of being moulded. It is similar to wet clay but remains flexible after 
            hardening. In Thailand it is used in particular to mould ornamental imitation 
            flowers (fig.) 
			and miniature daily life utensils and foodstuffs (fig.), 
			especially fruit (fig.). 
			 
			
			
			回  
			 
           
            
			
			dipa (दीप)  
		Sanskrit for ‘light’ or ‘lamp’, especially an oil lamp made from clay, with a 
		cotton wick dipped in vegetable oils, or in Indian clarified butter known as ghee, 
		which reminds of the Tibetan butter lamp that was traditionally fueled 
		with clarified  
		
		yak butter. These clay oil lamps, similar to the northern Thai 
		  
		
		
		
		phaang pha 
		theed
		(fig.), 
		are widely used in  
		
        Hindu temples, often together 
		or in combination with larger, ornamental oil lamps 
		made of brass (fig.), and during special Hindu festivals, such as Dipavali, 
		which is commonly known as the Festival of Lights. Lights play an 
		important part in Hindu rituals, such as in Aarti (fig.), 
		a term that derives 
		from the Sanskrit word Aratrika (आरात्रिक), 
		which means ‘something that removes
		
		ratri (darkness)’,
		 and in the course of time they became 
		associated with the goddess  
		
    Lakshmi. A special kind of lamp 
		called dipa-Lakshmi shows the goddess in a standing pose and holding a 
		lamp with one wick. There are also other types of lamps showing either 
		Laksmi or  
	 
		
		Gaja Lakshmi, 
		and lamps with five wicks are used in Shaiva worship as the number five 
		is the is sacred to 
		
            
			Shiva. 
		Another kind of lamp used as a stand, has the image of a 
		
		peacock, the 
		mount of 
		
		Sarasvati, 
		the goddess of  
		 
		
		learning (who 
		enlightens the mind), 
		and yet another lamp used in Hindu rituals has the form of a tree and is called 
		 
		
		dipavriksha, 
		which means 
		
		‘tree of lamps’ 
		(fig.).
		The latter may also bear depictions of a deity, such as
		
		
		Ganesha 
		(fig.). 
		This is reminiscent of
		  
		Burmese
		Arakan-style bronze oil lamps (fig.), 
		that depict 
		
		Dipankhara (fig.),
		the 
		
		first of 27 
		      
		      buddha 
		predecessors and whose 
		name means ‘Lamp bearer’, 
		holding a small oil receptacle (fig.). Sometimes transcribed deepa, as in
		
		
		deepastambha.
		See also
		 
		
		Dipavali. 
		 
			
		
		回  
		 
           
          %201_small.jpg)  
			
			
		Dipangkorn (·Õ»Ñ§¡Ã)  
		1. Thai. Name of a royal prince of the 
		
		      
		      
              Chakri
		Dynasty in Thailand, 
		i.e. the fifth yet only recognized son of  King 
                
                
              	Vajiralongkorn. 
		The name derives from the Sanskrit 
		      
		      Dipankhara, 
		and is pronounced as well as otherwise transliterated 
		
			Thipangkon. 
		
			
		
		回  
		2. Thai name for 
                
		      
		      
		      Dipankhara, 
		i.e. the first of 27 
		      
		      buddha
		 
		predecessors. 
		
			
		
		回  
		
		
		Dipankha (दिपंखा)  
		
		Sanskrit. 
		Another name for  
		
		Dipankhara. 
		 
			
		
		回  
			
		
		Dipankhara (दिपंखार, ·Õ»Ñ§¡Ã)  
			Sanskrit. 
			‘Lamp bearer’ (fig.). 
			The first of 27 
		      
		      buddha
			 predecessors, who pledges to 
            the ascetic     
			 
			Brahman
			 
			 
			Sumedha 
			(fig.), that he will one day become a buddha 
			(fig.). Sumedha was an former incarnation of 
			  
			 
			Siddhartha
			  
			 
			Gautama,
            who later became the historical   
			 
			Buddha. 
			Sometimes transcribed Dipankara and also known as  
			
			Dipankha. 
			In Burmese-Arakan art and 
		      
		      
		      iconography, 
			he is often represented as an oil lamp (fig.), 
			i.e. standing upright while holding a small oil receptacle (fig.). 
			In Thai, known as 
			
				
		Dipangkorn, 
			which is also pronounced as well as otherwise transliterated 
			
			Thipangkon. See also 
			
			Sumidha. 
			
			
			回   
		 
           
           
            
			
			
			Dipavali (दीपावली)
			
			  
		Hindi. ‘Row of lamps’. Indian Festival of Lights, 
		i.e. a 5-day festival celebrated in
		
		
		      Hinduism
		and 
		
		
		
		Jainism, 
		as well as by the
			
			
			
            Sikh, between mid-October 
		and mid-November. It celebrates the triumph of light over darkness, i.e. 
		good over evil, yet has different signification for each of the 
		aforementioned religions. In Hinduism, it commemorates the return of
		
		
            Rama from his 14-year long exile, 
		and his triumph over the demon  
			
			Ravana, while in Jainism it 
		marks the attainment of  
		
		moksha 
		by  
		
    
	Mahavira, whereas in Sikhism, it celebrates the 
		release from 
		prison of the sixth  
		
	guru. Also known as Diwali (Divali). See also
		
              	Vijayadazaami and
		
		dipa. 
		 
			
		
		回  
		
		
		
		dipavriksha   
		
		
		(दीपवृक्ष)  
		Sanskrit-Hindi. ‘Tree of lamps’,  ‘tree of lights’, or  ‘tree 
		lamp’. 
		Lamp in the form of a tree and used by    
						 
						
        
		brahmin
		
		priests in 
						
						Hindu
		
		rituals (fig.). 
		 
		When used decoratively, it may sometimes bear depictions of a Hindu 
		deity 
		(fig.). Also transcribed deepavriksha. 
		 
			
		
		回   
  
           
           
          _small.jpg)   
		
		Diplommatina khwantongae  
		Binomial scientific name 
		for a species of terrestrial micro snail in the family Diplommatinidae 
		and in Thai referred to as hoi 
				
				
				krasuay
			jiw 
			khwaan thong (หอยกระสวยจิ๋วขวานทอง), 
		which translates to ‘Khwanthong's Tiny Spindle Snail’. It is a newly 
		discovered species of tiny land snail, officially named Diplommatina 
		khwantongae in 2020, with the name khwantongae referring Ms. Kanita 
		Khwantong (¤³ÔµÒ ¢ÇÒ¹·Í§), who first discovered 
		this species. This species was first found in Lub Lae (ÅѺáÅ)
		Cave, located in 
		
			Chonburi 
		
		Province, within the 
		limestone hills. The snail has a small, cylindrical, light orange shell 
		with about seven whorls, and the live animal has a greyish body with 
		orange eyes. The snail's shell is unique with thin, widely spaced radial 
		ribs and a thickened peristome. This species is highly localized, known 
		only from a few limestone hills in Chonburi and 
		
			
			Rayong 
		Provinces, making it particularly rare and challenging to find in the 
		wild. This finding adds to the known diversity of the Diplommatina genus 
		in Thailand, bringing the total number of species in the country to 22, 
		with five species now recorded in the eastern region. The discovery 
		highlights the high level of endemism among these snails, which are 
		often restricted to specific limestone habitats, limiting their ability 
		to spread to other areas. 
			
			
			See also POSTAGE STAMPS. 
			
回  
			
			
			Dipterocarpus  
			
			Latin-English name for an evergreen tree with a large 
            straight trunk and which flowering season is from March to May. Its seeds have 
            two wings which enables them to whirl down like helicopters. In North Thailand 
            often seen on the side of the road. In Thai  
			 phluang. Also 
			Dipterocarpus alatus.  
			
			
			回  
			
			
			Discovery Museum  
		Name 
		of a museum in
		
		
		Bangkok, which opened its doors in the 
		first half of 2008, after 5 years of preparations. It is housed in an 
		ancient building in Italian architectural style, which formerly 
		accommodated the Thai Ministry of Commerce. 
		  The 
		museum's original permanent exhibit was titled Riang Khwaam Prathet Thai 
		(àÃÕ§¤ÇÒÁ»ÃÐà·Èä·Â), i.e. ‘Essays on Thailand’, and explored history of 
		Thailand through various aspects, but in 2017 its permanent exhibit was 
		rearranged and launched with the new title Thod Rahat Thai (¶Í´ÃËÑÊä·Â), 
		i.e. ‘Decoding Thainess’, and aims to deconstruct the meaning of 
		Thainess. In Thai, the museum 
		was initially called Phiphithaphan Kaanrianroo Haeng Chaht (¾Ô¾Ô¸Àѳ±ì¡ÒÃàÃÕ¹ÃÙéáË觪ҵÔ), 
		though it later became known as Museum Siam 
		(ÁÔÇà«ÕÂÁÊÂÒÁ), in English referred to as Museum of Siam. 
		Visitors to the 
		Essays on 
		Thailand exhibit
		 
		embarked on a journey through time from early
		
		
			Suvarnabhumi and
		
		
			Siam to present-day 
		 
		
		
			Thailand, 
		covering every field and time period, including people, history, 
		religion, war, agriculture, trade, politics, technology, etc. Guests 
		visiting the current permanent Decoding 
		Thainess 
		exhibit are taken on a journey that analyses the 
		concept of what it is to be Thai, on the hand of typical Thai objects 
		and products. The 
		account of Thailand and Thainess is given with the aid of displays, diaphragms, scale 
		models and P. Learning, a system of play and learn (fig.). 
		
		
		See also POSTAGE STAMP, 
		
		
		
		MAP, 
		
		 
		and 
			
			WATCH VIDEO.
		
			
		
		回  
  
           
           
          %20entrance%202_small.jpg)  
			
			
		discus  
		
		See
		
		
		chakra. 
		 
			
		
		回  
		
		
		Dit Bunnag (´ÔÈ ºØ¹¹Ò¤)  
		
		Thai. Name at birth of 
		
		Somdet
		
		
		Chao Phraya
		
		
		Borom
		
		
		Maha
		
		
		Prayoonwong.
		Often literally 
		transliterated Dis Bunnag, though correct pronunciation is with t at the 
		end, whereas the surname is correctly pronounced Boonnaak. 
		See also 
		
		Bunnag.
		
		
		回  
		
		
		dithi (´Ô¶Õ)  
		
		Thai term for a so-called Lunar Day, i.e. an 
		auspicious day 
		
		determined by the counting of days according to the lunar waning.
		
		
		回  
		
		
		Divine Eye  
		Symbol of Caodaism, i.e. the
		
		Cao Dai religion. 
		It is a variation of the Eye 
                
		              
              	of Providence, i.e. the all-seeing eye of 
		God used in 
		      
		      
		      Christianity. 
		It is often surrounded by rays of light 
		and/or placed in a triangle (fig.), 
		of which the latter in Christianity refers to the Trinity. 
		
			
		
		回  
			
			
  
		
		Diving Buddha Image Festival  
			
			Annual event held in the province of   
			
			
			Phetchabun on the 15th day of the waning moon in the 10th lunar month and in which the 
            highly revered ancient Phra Phutta 
			
			
			Maha Dhamma Racha
			
			 Buddha image of Phetchabun 
            is taken to the Pa Sak river to be immersed in the water for ritual bathing. The 
            image was found in the Pa Sak river by a group of farmers about four hundred 
            years ago and was taken to be housed in Wat Trai Phum. According to a legend the 
            Buddha image had disappeared twice from the temple and was later found in the 
            water. It was said that the Buddha image itself had wandered out of the temple. 
            From that time onwards the local people have organized the Um Phra Dam Nahm 
            Festival, in which they carry the image around town and place it under a tent at 
            Wat Trai Phum so that Buddhists can pay respect to it by sticking gold leaf onto 
            it. In the evening prayers are chanted and at night there are various kinds of 
            entertainment. The next morning the image is taken to be immersed in the Pa Sak 
            river by the local governor and traditional dances are performed to show 
			respect 
            to it. After the ceremony the water in the river is regarded as sacred and 
            people will swim in it and take some water home. The Phra Phutta Maha Dhamma 
            Racha Buddha image is then taken back to the temple where it resides to ensure 
            seasonal rain.  
			
			
			回  
		
		
		Diyu (地狱)
		  
		Chinese. ‘Earth prison’ or ‘prison land’. Hell or 
		the realm of the dead in Chinese-Taoist 
		beliefs.  
		
		READ ON. 
			
		
		回  
			
			
			Di Zhuia (µÕè¨ÙéàÍÕêÂÐ)  
		
Tae Chew name 
		for the 
		Chinese protection god of residences, land, homes and houses, 
		in Chinese referred to as 
		
		Tu Di Gong 
		and in Vietnamese as 
		
			
			Tho Cong 
		(fig.).
		He is the Chinese 
		equivalent of the Thai 
		
		
		chao thih, 
		the animist guardian spirit of the land, 
		who lives in 
			
			spirit houses called 
			
		
		
		sahn chao tih 
		(fig.). 
		He is associated with 
	
		
		Peung Thao Kong, 
		who is worshipped as the Chinese protection god for residences, 
		locations and dwellings, i.e. to protect and maintain the place of 
		residence, especially for a neighbourhood, a community or a village.  
			
			回   
			
			
_small.jpg)  
		 
		
			
			djatiwood  
			 
			 See  
			  
			 
			teak. 
            In Thai 
			 
			mai sak. 
			
			
			
			回  
			
			do-chala  
			A rectangular Bengali-style roof. 
			
			
			回   
		
		Dodder  
		Common name 
		for a genus of a parasitic plant, with a yellowish, slender, 
		filament-like appearance, that reminds of spaghetti or 
    
		
		noodles, 
		especially of
		
		
        bamih (fig.), and known by the scientific designation Cuscuta. Worldwide, this genus has well over 100 species, found 
		throughout subtropical and tropical regions. The botanical name for the 
		species most frequently found in Thailand is Cuscuta reflexa, which is 
		known by the common names Giant Dodder and Southern Asian Dodder. 
		Because most species 
		lack or have very low levels of chlorophyll, they cannot photosynthesize 
		fully -though Cuscuta reflexa is able to do so slightly- they generally have a yellowish colour. 
		Although some species are 
		more orange to reddish-brown and occasionally, though rarely, they may be greenish. This parasitic vine grows fast and 
		rapidly forms a dense mass of thin, 
		apparently leafless stems, entwined in the host plant. In fact, many 
		species do 
		have leaves, but those are reduced to minuscule scales and barely 
		visible from a distance. It germinates in the earth, then, after the 
		part of the germinated seed which later grows into the root dies, it 
		clings to its host, which may become completely overgrown and from 
		which it drains sap, giving it the nickname Dracula of the Plants. In Thai, it is 
		known as khreua bao kham (à¤Ã×Íà¢Ò¤Ó), and in
		
		
		Isaan as (¼Ñ¡äËÁ). 
		In addition, it is also nicknamed  
		
		foi thong
		(fig.). 
		 
			
		
		回  
		
%20à¤Ã×Íà¢Ò¤Ó,%20¼Ñ¡äËÁ%204_small.jpg)  
		dog  
		
		See 
		 
		
		sunak.  
			
		
		回  
		
		
		Dog-toothed Cat Snake  
		A 
		large, mildly venomous species of arboreal
 
			      
			      snake, with the scientific name Boiga cynodon. It can 
		grow well over 2.5 meters and has a rather vertically flat body, with a 
		pale yellow to light brown colouration and dark brown or black 
		crossbars, that become more closely spaced and relatively thicker 
		towards the tail. The head often has a strong yellow hue and typically, 
		a black stripe extends from behind the eye to the base of the jaw. 
		Melanistic specimens are relatively common and occasionally totally 
		black forms occur. It prefers lowland areas and occurs in southern 
		Thailand, as well as in  
		
    
	Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia and the 
		Philippines. In Thai called
		
		
		ngu sae haang 
mah.
		
			
			
		
		回  
			  
           
          	 
          %20§ÙáÊéËÒ§ÁéÒ_small.jpg)  
	
			
			doi (´ÍÂ)  
		Thai-kham meuang 
		term for ‘mountain’ used 
		mostly in northern Thailand, comparable to the general Thai term  
			
		
				
				khao, the 
		Thai-Khmer
		
		
		name 
		
		phanom 
		used in 
		
				Isaan, 
		and the 
			
		
		
		Phasa Pak Tai
		
		designation 
			
		
		khiri
		used in southern Thailand.
			
			
		
			回   
		
			
			Doi Inthanon (ดอยอินทนนท์)  
			
			Thailand's highest mountain. According to a sign on its 
            summit, this mountain in 
			
		      Chiang Mai province is 
			2,565.3341 meter high 
			(map 
			- 
			fig.). 
			It is situated in a   
			
			482 
			km² National Park, known as Doi Inthanon
			National Park, which also 
			features the Mae Ya, Mae Klang, Wachirathan and Siriphum waterfalls; 
			the golden Phra 
	
			
    
	Mahathat 
			Naphamethanidon and the
			
			
			
			silver 
			Phra Mahathat Naphaphonphumisiri
			
			
			Chedis, 
			twin pagodas built by the Royal Thai Air Force in honour of the King 
			and Queen to commemorate their fifth birthday cycles (map 
			- 
			fig.); the Bori Jinda 
			cave; 
		
			
        
		Hmong 
			and 
	
			
	Karen 
			
			hill tribe villages; etc. Being 
			an interesting place for ornithologists, 
			the park also has a bird 
			centre. The second highest mountain of the nation is Doi Pha Hom Pok (ดอยผ้าห่มปก) 
			with an altitude of 2,297.84 meters. It is situated to the East of 
			Mae Ai and North of Fang, also in Chiang Mai province.
			
			
			See 
			MAP.  
			
			
			回  
%20National%20Park_small.jpg)  
			
			
			Doi Mae Salong (´ÍÂáÁèÊÅͧ)  
		Thai. Name of a mountain 
		village in 
		      Chiang Rai 
		that was founded by former 
		Chinese Kuomintang on land given to them after they arrived as refugees 
		from 
		
		      China.
		 
			
			READ ON. 
			 
			
		
			回  
		
		
		Doi Phu Kha (´ÍÂÀÙ¤Ò)   
		Thai. Name of a  
		National Park in
	
		
				
			Nan Province, 
		that covers an area of about 1,704 km². 
		
		
		
		 WATCH 
		VIDEO (1),
		
		(2), and
		
		VIDEO (EN). 
			 
			
		
			回   
		
   
		
			
			Doi Suthep (ดอยสุเทพ)  
			
			Thai. Mountain in 
			
		      Chiang Mai on which Phuping summer 
            palace is situated, and the famous Buddhist temple 
			
			
    
    Wat Doi Suthep. It has an altitude of about 1,685 
			meters. The temple is built at a height of around 1,053 meters and 
			the palace at approximately 1,373 meters. It is part of the 
			Doi Suthep-Pui
	(ดอยสุเทพ-ปุย) 
			National Park and   
			
			beside some 
			good places  for bird spotting, it features 
			
			hiking trails, waterfalls 
			such as 
Mok Fah Waterfall (fig.), 
	caves 
			of which some have  
		
		
		bats 
			(fig.), 
	and viewpoints.  
			
			See MAP. 
			 
			
			
			回  
		
%206_small.jpg)   
		
		Doi Tung (´Íµا) 
		Thai. A 1,389 meters high mountain (doi) in
		
		      Chiang Rai
		province, named after
		
		
		tung, i.e. long 
		ceremonial banners made of cloth (fig.) 
		and which are typical of the region. The mountain is known as the 
		location of Wat 
		
		
		Phrathat 
		Doi Tung (fig.), 
		as well as of Doi Tung Royal Villa, the former home of late Princess
		
		
		Sri Nagarindra, the Princess 
		Mother. The villa was initially built as a summer residence and has an 
		impressive botanical park. Today it is open to the public and houses a 
		museum dedicated to the Princess Mother's life and work, which includes 
		royal projects under her patronage, such as the Doi Tung Development 
		Project for Sustainable Development, established to improve the quality 
		of life of Thailand's ethnic minorities. 
		At a roundabout near the 
		entrance stands a monument (fig.) 
		called ton tung (µé¹µ§). It is composed of five erected tree trunks that 
		have fallen and died naturally, wood that in Thai is referred to as
		
		mai non phrai, literally ‘sleeping 
		forest wood’. The trunks of these dead trees (ton) 
		are adorned with ceremonial banners (tung), 
		that feature depictions of the 
		
		
		Lan Na zodiac (fig.). 
		The ton tung symbolizes victory, vigor, and good fortune, and it is 
		believed to bring auspiciousness wherever it is placed.  
		
		See also MAP,
		
		TRAVEL PICTURES (1),
		
		(2) and
		
		(3), 
		and 
		
		WATCH VIDEO (1) and
		
		(2).
		
		
		回  
		
  
		
		
		dok (´Í¡)  
		Thai 
		for ‘flower’, also used generally as a prefix for any flower. 
			
		
		回  
		
		
		
		dok aaw (´Í¡ÍÒÇ)  
			
			Thai. Northern Thai name for the  
			
			Siam Tulip. 
			 
			
			
			回   
		dok gek huay (´Í¡à¡ê¡ÎÇÂ)  
		
		Thai 
		name for the Chrysanthemum, a species of flowers with the scientific 
		name Dendranthemum grandifflora, and of which there are many varieties. 
		They originate from
		
		
		China and Japan, and in some parts of 
		Asia, yellow and white chrysanthemums are boiled to make a kind of tea. 
		These dried flowers can often be found on markets, sometimes pressed 
		into flat, circular sheets. Chrysanthemum tea is said to have a wide 
		variety of medicinal uses. Also known as benjamaht (ຨÁÒÈ) and 
		sometimes transcribed dok kek huai, or similar.  
			
		
		
		回   
		 
           
            
		
		dok goo chai (´Í¡¡Ùä©é)  
		
		Another name for
		
		
		dok gui chai. 
		 
			
		
		回  
		
		dok gui chai 
		(´Í¡¡ØÂªèÒÂ, ´Í¡¡ØÂäªè, ´Í¡¡ØëÂäªè)  
		 Thai 
		for ‘garlic chives’, a small plant with thin, straight, onion-flavoured, 
		tube-like stalks with tiny, white flowers and of the genus Allium, i.e. 
		the onion family. In the wild it has the botanical name 
		Allium
		ramosum, 
		but cultivated it is bears the scientific designation 
		
		Allium 
		tuberosum roxb. Both its flowers and 
		stalks are used as a garlic-like vegetable in Asian cuisine, and in 
		Thailand, the stalks are the main ingredient in a dish called phad dok 
		gui chai sai 
                
		kung  
		(¼Ñ´´Í¡¡ØÂªèÒÂãÊè¡Øé§), i.e. ‘stir-fried garlic chives with prawns’ (fig.). 
		Garlic chives are also 
		consumed as a filling in steamed dumplings, that are made from 
		
		rice 
		powder and known as
		
		kanom gui chai (fig.). 
		The flowering plant is 
		nicknamed Chinese leek flower and Chinese chives flower, and in China it is called jiu cai hua 
		(韭菜花). Also  
		
		dok goo chai. 
		 
			
		
		回   
		 
           
          %20leek%20flowers%202_small.jpg)  
		
		dok khae (´Í¡á¤)  
		Thai name for the white, edible 
		flowers of the 
		
		Hummingbird Tree (fig.), a small 
		tree with the scientific name Sesbania grandiflora, which are used in 
		Thai and Asian cuisine, both cooked and raw. The crescent-shaped, flat, 
		bean-like flower buds can frequently be seen for sale at fresh markets 
		nationwide. Cooked they are mostly used in curries. Also known by the 
		common names Vegetable Hummingbird, Sesban, and Agasta. 
			
		
		回  
			
			
			
_small.jpg)  
		
		
		dok khao phansa (´Í¡à¢éÒ¾ÃÃÉÒ)  
		Thai. ‘Entering
		
		
		Buddhist Lent 
		flower’. Name used in
		
		
			Thailand 
		for the 
		Weeping Goldsmith 
		(fig.), 
		as it is used as an offer in certain ceremonies during  
		
		
	khao phansa, 
		such as in the  
		annual  Flower 
		Offering Ceremony during the 
	
	Tak Baat 
		 
		      
		Dokmai
		 Festival at 
						
						Wat Phra Phutthabaat
	in 
	
			Saraburi. 
			
		
		回  
		
		dok khrob (´Í¡¤Ãͺ)  
		Thai. ‘Cover flower’ or ‘overarching flower’. Term in
		
		
	kaan jad dokmai, that 
		refers to any type of 
		usually open flower that overarches the
		
		
		dok tum, the
		lowermost flower, that is suspended at the 
		bottom of a garland, somewaht akin to a calyx. This crown-like flower 
		sits in between and separates the dok tum and the bunch of stringed 
		flowers, known as
		
		
		dok suam. It is part of the
		
		
		u-ba, the flower bunch, that hangs from 
		garlands, called
		
		
			puang malai. 
		 
			
		
		回  
		 
		
		dokmai (´Í¡äÁé)
		  
		Thai 
		for ‘flower’, ‘bloom’ or ‘blossom’. The term is used for any kind of 
		flower, both real and artificial, as well as for floral designs. The 
		term may be shortened to just dok (´Í¡) and is usually specified with an 
		appendix to indicate the kind of flower one is referring to, e.g.
		
		
		dok ngiaw, 
 
dok maijan, etc. It is also a prefix for the 
		word for fireworks which are called 
		      
		      dokmai fai 
		or dokmai phleung (´Í¡äÁéà¾ÅÔ§) in Thai, literally ‘light flowers’ or 
		‘fire flowers’. A 
			
		
		khwaeng 
		or sub district, part 
		of the 
		
		khet Prawet 
		of 
		
		Bangkok, is 
		named Dokmai. 
			
		
		回  
		
		
		dokmai fai (´Í¡äÁéä¿)
		  
		Thai. ‘Fire flower’ or ‘bloom of light’. Term for fireworks.
		
		
		
		READ ON. 
		 
			
		
		回  
		 
		
		dok maijan (ดอกไม้จันทน์)
		  
		 
		Thai. ‘Sandalwood flowers’. Name for artificial flowers (dokmai) made of
		
sandalwood 
		(mai jan). 
		 
																												
		READ ON. 
		 
			
		
		回  
		
		
		dokmai thalae (´Í¡äÁé·ÐàÅ)   
		Thai. ‘Sea flower’. Thai generic 
		designation for the Sea Anemone, i.e. a group of predatory 
		water-dwelling animals belonging to the order Actiniaria, and of which 
		the English designation is coined on the Anemone, a genus of terrestrial 
		flowers. 
			
		
		回  
							        									
			 
			 
,%20Vietnam_small.jpg)  
		
		dok ngiw (´Í¡§ÔéÇ)  
		
		See
		
		
		dok ngiaw. 
		 
			
		
		回  
		
		dok ngiaw (´Í¡à§ÕéÂÇ)  
		Thai. Name of dark orange to 
		red flowers 
		(fig.) 
		from the Cotton Tree, a tropical tree known in Thai as
		
		
		ton ngiw (fig.) 
		and with the botanical name Bombax ceiba. The tree blooms from January to February, and
		from 
		around mid-February, when the flowers start to fall, the local people 
		gather to collect them (fig.).
		
		
		The steamed or blanched petals of its flowers are eaten 
		like a vegetable with 
		
	nahm phrik. 
		Coated with a dough made of corn powder, the petals are 
		fried and eaten as a snack called dok ngiaw chub paeng thod (´Í¡à§ÕéÂǪغá»é§·Í´). 
		The filaments of the flower's stamen, without the petals or anther (fig.), are used as an ingredient to flavour food 
		in Thai and oriental cooking. It is used to spice up a dish called nahm ngiaw 
		which is typically eaten with
		
		
    kanom jihn and 
		therefore also called kanom jihn nahm ngiaw. It 
		is also used as an ingredient in a curry-like soup called kaeng som (á¡§ÊéÁ), perhaps 
		named after the colour of the curry, or after the colour of the flowers, 
		as som means ‘orange’. In China, dok ngiaw have long been an ingredient 
		in Chinese herbal tea. They are said to be very nutritious 
		and rich in calcium. Also referred to as 
		
		dok ngiw. 
		
			
		
		回  
			
%203_small.jpg)  
		
		dok rak (´Í¡ÃÑ¡)  
		
		Thai. ‘Love flower’. Thai name for the 
		 
		
		Crown Flower, which is also known as
		
		
		Giant Indian Milkweed,
		an up to four meter 
		tall shrub with the scientific name Calotropis gigantea. It has clusters 
		of waxy flowers that can be white (fig.) or purple in colour, and which 
		consist of five pointed petals and a crown at the centre (fig.). This quadrangular, bell-shaped crown is 
		typically used as
		
		
		dok suam to make
		
		
		u-ba, stringed flower bunches, which in turn are 
		used to be hung from garlands, called
		
		
			puang malai, as well as in various 
		other floral arrangements (fig.), such as with
		
		
		kreuang khwaen, net or frame-like 
		arrangements of stringed flowers (fig.), 
		used as ornaments to suspend at windows, doorways, gables, etc. These 
		days also synthetic love flowers can be found (fig.). 
		 
			
		
		回   
		 
           
          _small.jpg)  
		
		dok-sofa (ດອກຊ່ອຟ້າ)  
			
			Lao. An fern leaf-like ornament which surmounts temple roofs in Laos. It may 
            be translated as ‘a bucket of flowers’ and could be compared with the Thai 
			  
			 
			chofa. 
			Ten or more flowers indicate that a king built the temple.  
			
			
			回  
		
		dok suam (´Í¡ÊÇÁ)  
		
		Thai. ‘Flower to dress, wear or put on’. A term for any type of flower 
		that is used to make a bunch of stringed flowers, which in turn is used 
		to suspend from a garland or with
		
		
		kreuang khwaen, decorative net or 
		frame-like arrangements of stringed flowers (fig.), 
		used to be hung up at windows, doorways, gables, etc. It is the middle, 
		stringed flower part, between and attached to the  
		garland, and 
		
		above the lowermost, usually larger and colourful flower, that is 
		suspended at the bottom and which is known as
		
		
		dok tum. 
		As dok suam, most popularly, 
		
		dok rak 
		(fig.) 
		are used. It is part of the
		 
		
		u-ba, the flower bunch that hangs from
		
		
		puang malai. 
		 
			
		
		回  
		
		dok thong (´Í¡·Í§)   
		Thai. ‘Golden flower’ or ‘flowers of gold’. Slang for a prostitute or 
		for someone who is sexually promiscuous. A girls virginity or sexuality 
		is often compared to a flower, like in the fact that 
		
		in 
		the 
		 
 Ayutthaya
		Period any woman, who was caught 
		in an act of infidelity or adultery, was put to shame by being made to 
		wear red  
		
		
		
        
		hibiscus
		
		flowers, and in the expression dok mai ruang (´Í¡äÁéÃèǧ) which 
		means ‘fallen flower’ and refers to a girl who has lost her virginity. A 
		golden flower hence refers to the fact that something precious is being 
		offered, worth ‘its value in gold’. With a prostitute this would involve 
		a transaction of valuable items, i.e. money. The Thai word for money is 
		
			
		
		
		ngun, which literally means ‘silver’. This association of gold and 
		
			
			silver is reminiscent of 
		
		ton mai ngeun ton mai thong, 
		the annual tribute of silver and gold trees, that vassal states in the 
		past were required to pay to the ruling kings, as an indication of their 
		loyalty. This practice developed into the silver and golden, wooden 
		flowers and the silver and golden, cone-shaped 
		
		phum dokmai 
		flower arrangements, that people offer to royalty today and are put at 
		their statues or pictures, as an indication of loyalty or ‘submission’. 
		
			
		
		回  
		
		dok tum (´Í¡µØéÁ)  
		
		Thai. ‘Knob flower’. Term in
		
		
	kaan jad dokmai, that 
		refers to the 
		lowermost, usually larger and colourful flower, that is suspended at the 
		bottom of a garland. It is part of the
		
		
		u-ba, the flower bunch, that hangs from 
		garlands, called
		
		
			puang malai. It is at the end of 
		the string of  
		
		dok suam, yet is separated from it by 
		the  
		
		dok khrob, a crown-like flower in 
		between the dok tum and the bunch of stringed flowers.  
			
		
		回  
			
			
			dok yah (´Í¡ËéÒ)  
		Thai. Generic name for any kind of land grass, i.e. flowering plants 
		belonging to the family Gramineae, which is also known as Poaceae, 
		including large types that can frequently be seen growing along 
		roadsides, and which might then be referred to as dok yah rim thahng (´Í¡ËéÒÃÔÁ·Ò§), 
		i.e. ‘roadside grass’. Certain species, especially dok yah tong kong (´Í¡Ëéҵͧ¡§), 
		known in English as bamboo grass and tiger grass (Thysanolaena latifolia), 
		and nicknamed broom 
		grass, are in Thailand used to make 
		natural brooms called  
		
		mai kwaat dok yah (fig.). 
		Sometimes called just yah (ËéÒ), i.e. ‘grass’.  
			
		
		回   
		 
           
          _small.jpg)  
		
		
		Do Mae Than (â´èáÁè¶Ñ¹)  
		Thai. Name for a rocky hill 
		in 
		
		Sukhothai 
		province that is 
		covered with various types 
		of plants and vegetation, whereas the top consists of sharp rock. There 
		is a short yet steep ropeway hiking trail to the peak along some rock 
		formations that provide good grips and facilitate the climb. The summit 
		offers a 360 degree view of the area and there is a gilded Buddha statue 
		seated in the 
		
			maravijaya pose. During the 
		
		
		rainy season, 
		local people tend to come here to look for
		
			bamboo shoots (fig.).
		
		
		See also TRAVEL PICTURES.
		
			
		
		回   
           
           
             
		
			
		Domesticated Silkmoth  
		
		Common name for a species of moth, that cannot fly and has the 
		scientific name Bombyx mori.  It has a white, hairy body, with 
		females being more bulky than males, for they are carrying the eggs. 
		Furthermore, it has dark, feather-like antennae on the top of its head, 
		and a wingspan of about 3 to 5 centimeters. The cocoons of its larvae, 
		i.e. Mulberry Silkworms (fig.), 
		and its pupae 
		(fig.), are used in 
		 
		
			
		sericulture. 
		Both silk, as well as the moths and their larvae, are known in Thai as
		
		
    mai, with the larvae 
		sometimes being specified as 
		
		non mai and the 
		
		
		silk pupae 
		as tua 
		mai (fig.), 
		with the latter in Thai also referred to as 
		
		dakdae. 
		The Latin designation Bombyx mori means ‘mulberry silkworm’, and refers 
		to the main food source of this moth's larvae, i.e. the leaves of the 
		white mulberry tree (Morus alba).  
			
		
		回   
		 
           
          %20äËÁ_small.jpg)  
			
			
			Dollarbird  
		
		Common name for a 27.5 to 31.5 centimeters tall bird, with the 
		scientific name Eurystomus orientalis. Adults are dark greenish-brown 
		above and dark bluish-purple to turquoise below, with a darker breast, 
		as well as faint light blue streaks on the throat.  In addition, 
		the subspecies Eurystomus orientalis abundus has a blacker crown, nape 
		and head-sides. The bill is thick and reddish-orange, while the legs and 
		feet are grayish-pink to red. In flight, a silvery-turquoise patch is 
		visible on the wings. Juveniles are browner above and have only some or 
		no turquoise at all on the throat. They have a mostly dark bill and the 
		head is initially all-brown. It preys on insects and is most commonly 
		seen as a single bird with a distinctive upright silhouette, perching on 
		a bare branch high-up in a tree, which it uses as a base from where it 
		hunts, often catching prey in flight. In English also commonly known by 
		the names Oriental Dollarbird and Dollar Roller, and in Thai called
		
		
		nok takaab dong. 
		It is related to the  
		
		Indian Roller
		(fig.) 
		and its name derives from the from the silvery, circular patches on the 
		underside of its wings, thought to resemble the 
		
		American  
		 
			
			silver dollar coin. 
		 
		
		See also WILDLIFE PICTURES (1) 
		and 
		
		(2). 
		 
			
		
		回   
		 
           
          %201_small.jpg)   
		
		Dollar Roller  
		See  
		
Dollarbird.
		
			
		
		回  
			
          
		don (ดอน)  
		Thai. ‘Highland’ or ‘high ground’. It sometimes appears in place names, 
		e.g. 
			
		Don Meuang and 
		
        
		Don Rak. It is also used as an 
		abbreviated term for  
          
          
          sandon, 
		i.e. ‘bar’ or ‘sandbank’, as in Don Hoy Lot, meaning ‘Razor Clam 
		Sandbank’. 
			
		
		回  
		
		
		Dona 
		(दोन)  
			
			Name of the  
			 
			brahmin sage, who after the 
			  
			 
			Buddha's cremation divided the 
			relics of the Buddha among eight warring kings. 
			 
			
			
			回  
			
			
			
			Dong (侗)
			  
		
		Chinese. Name of an ethnic minority 
		group in southern 
		
		
		China, whose members live mostly in 
		northern Guangxi (fig.), eastern Guizhou, and western Hunan provinces, while 
		small pockets of Dong speakers also occur in northern  
		
		
		Vietnam. The Dong 
		are famed for their distinctive architecture, especially a unique kind 
		of covered bridge known as Wind and Rain Bridge (fig.), 
		the more famous one being that of Chengyang (map 
		- 
		
		fig.), whilst culturally they are renowned for their songs and music, which is 
		played during festivities and to welcome guests into the 
		village (fig.). According to custom, the Dong make oil-tea, a kind of greasy 
		tea with  
		
		rice, of which purportedly three kinds exist, i.e. a bitter 
		tea, a sweet version, and sweet-and-sour variety, which are said to 
		symbolize the three stages in life, i.e. youth, which is bitter since 
		one is still immature and in need; adult life, which is sweet; and old 
		age, which may be bitter due to physical problems, but which also has 
		its memories, which are sweet. When pronounced Tong, the name means 
		‘ignorant’. According 
		to their funeral traditions, 
		the children have to provide 
		their parents with a coffin before they pass away, in order that the 
		parents can rest assure that they'll have a decent burial. Hence, houses 
		of the elderly typically have one or two coffins stored inside the 
		living quarters, or somewhere else close by. 
			
		
		回   
		 
           
            
		
		dong (´Í§)  
		Thai 
		for ‘to pickle’, an ancient traditional method used to preserve 
		foodstuffs, by soaking and storing it in vinegar or brine, or sometimes 
		in oil or lemon juice for fruits and vegetables, a method called Indian 
		pickle and in which the pickle also serves as a flavour enhancer. Other 
		traditional methods of preserving fruits and vegetables include 
		
    	
    	kuan
		(boiling 
		and stirring),
		
		
		cheuam (boiled in syrup) and 
		  
		
		
		chae im (soaking in syrup). 
		
			
		
		回   
		 
           
          %20pickled%20fruit_small.jpg)  
			
			
			Dong Ba Market  
		Name of a large indoor 
		marketplace in Hue. Its vendors sell anything from fresh and preserved 
		foodstuffs to clothing and utensils. It is known in Vietnamese as Cho 
		Dong Ba (Chợ Đông Ba). 
		
		
		See TRAVEL PICTURE.
		
			
		
		回   
           
           
            
			
			
			dong chong xia cao (冬虫夏草)  
		
		Chinese. ‘Winter worm, summer grass’. Name for Cordyceps sinensis, 
		commonly known as caterpillar fungus or vegetable caterpillar (fig.). This parasitic fungus germinates 
		in living organisms, often the larvae of certain moths, then kills the 
		host, mummifies it and grows from the dead body. The fungus is used as a 
		medicinal mushroom in Traditional Chinese medicine. The larvae live 
		underground for many years before pupating, and are attacked by the 
		fungus when feeding on roots. The dark brown to black, usually columnar mushroom grows out 
		of the forehead of the caterpillar and emerges from the ground in spring 
		or early summer, hence the Chinese designation. The mushrooms with the 
		mummified caterpillar still attached are hand-collected and highly 
		prized, but also highly priced.  
			
		
		回   
		 
           
          _small.jpg)  
		
			
			
			Dong Duong (Đông Dương)  
			
			1. 
			Vietnamese. The centre of  
			 
			Cham art 
            and culture, which supplanted the city of
			
			
    My Son, from the time King Indravarman 
            II built a Mahayana Buddhist monastery there, at the end of the 9th century AD, 
			thus abandoning the religious traditions of his Shaivist 
			predecessors. Dong Duong remained the locus of Cham art and culture for less than a century, 
			and the sculptures of that period are collectively known as Dong 
			Duong style.  
			
			
			回  
		2. 
		Vietnamese term for Indochina. 
			
		
		回  
			
			
			Dong Phreuksa (´§¾Ä¡ÉÒ)  
		
		Thai. ‘Floral Jungle’ or ‘Jungle 
		of Flora’. Name of the sixth level in the 
		series of seven falls of the 
		
		Erawan 
		Waterfall (fig.) 
		at Erawan 
		National Park (fig.) 
		in 
	Kanchanaburi 
		Province.
		
		
		
		See MAP. 
		
		
		回  
					
  
		
			
			Dong 
			Son (Đông Sơn)  
			1. 
			Vietnamese. Decorated bronze drums of various types and sizes, 
			produced for ritual purposes and considered the pinnacle of Southeast Asian art. 
			In the past, these drums were exported all over Southeast Asia, and 
			are evidence of ancient trade connections between the Red River 
			Valley of northern 
			
			
			Vietnam, where the drums originated, and other 
			societies in the region, including
			
			
			China (fig.), 
			  
			
			      
			      Siam
			(fig.), 
			Java, etc. The bronze drum's surface decorations are recognized as 
			an icon of Vietnam's cultural heritage and the drum head is hence 
			used as the national symbol of Vietnamese culture (fig.). Sometimes transliterated Dongson. See also 
			 
			 
			klong mahoratuk. 
			 
			
			
			回  
		     
			 
          	 
            
			2. A culture that produced high-quality bronze-work between 
            500 and 200 BC. 
			
			
			回  
			3. A village at the Ma river in 
			 
			
			Vietnam. 
			 
			
			
			回  
			
			
			Don Meuang 
			(´Í¹àÁ×ͧ)  
		Thai. Name of a 
		
			
                
              khet or
		 
			zone in 
		greater 
		
		Bangkok, 
		as well as the name of an airport, 
		named after the zone or 
                
              khet 
		where it was built and which started 
		operations on 8 March 1918 as an alternate for the 
		
		Sanam Bin Sra Pathum 
		airfield (fig.)
		in 
		
		Bangkok's Pathumwan District.
		
		
		
		READ ON. 
			
		
		回   
			
		
			Don Rak (´Í¹ÃÑ¡)  
			Thai. ‘Highland of Love’. Cemetery near the centre of 
			
	Kanchanaburi where 6,982 allied soldiers are buried, all victims from WW II, most who 
            died during the construction of the infamous  
			
		      Death Railway 
			from Thailand to
			 
			 
			 Burma. 
			Unlike mass 
			graves in which soldiers were in the past sometimes dumped, each 
			soldier, whether a general or a private, has his own named grave, 
			whilst the tombstones of unknown victims who fell are inscribed with 
			the words Known Unto God, a text coined by the writer Rudyard 
			Kipling, author of The Jungle Book, after he had pressed his only 
			son Jack to join the army 
			and whom died in action in WWI while his body was never retrieved. 
			 See also
			 
			don 
			and 
			 
			 
			Chong Kai. 
			 
			
			
			See MAP 
			and
			
			WATCH VIDEO. 
			 
			
			
			回    
           
          _small.jpg)  
			
			
			door pillow  
		
		Another term for 
	
	bearing 
	stone. 
			 
			
		
		回  
			 
			
			
			dougong (斗栱)  
		 
			Chinese. Term for interlocking brackets used in 
		ancient Chinese architecture 
		and originally made from wood, though later also other materials were 
		used (fig.). They form a structural and ornamental network that joins pillars 
		and columns to the frame of the roof, both on the inside and the 
		outside. In Buddhist temples and imperial palaces, their role is often 
		more decorative than structural, and as such they are usually 
		elaborately painted in bright colours and adorned with landscapes or 
		motifs (fig.). 
		They are fitted together by joinery 
		alone, using a click and lock system, without the need of glue or nails, 
		nor wedges. 
			The concept is uniquely Chinese, 
		but was adapted by some other nations. The Chinese regard it as an 
		iconographic symbol of their culture and thus it nowadays also appears 
		as a freestanding monument, often on a pillar with a historical 
		reference (fig.). Besides its decorative purpose, a freestanding dougong 
		column may occasionally also be functional, e.g. doubling as a lamppost 
		(fig.). 
		The architect of the China Pavilion at the 2010 World Expo in Shanghai 
		is said to have been inspired by this traditional feature and building 
		style, and assimilated it into the iconic pavilion 
		(map 
		- 
		fig.). 
		See also 
			
			Kongming Lock. 
			 
			
		
		回  
		  
           
           
            
			
			
			dou kong zhu (抖空竹)  
		
		Chinese. 
		‘Shaking the sky 
		
			
			bamboo’. 
		Term for 
		spinning a 
		Chinese yo-yo. 
		See 
		 
		
		kong zhu. 
			
		
		
		回  
		
		Dou 
		Mu (斗母)   
		
		Chinese. Name of a 
			
			
			Taoist
		deity also known as Dou Mu Yuanjun (斗母元君), meaning  
		‘Primordial 
		Sovereign Mother of the Big Dipper’, who 
		occupies a revered position within the Taoist pantheon. Her name 
		reflects her cosmic significance: Dou refers to the constellation of the  
		‘Big Dipper’, 
		while Mu denotes  
		‘Mother’. 
		Thus, Dou Mu is venerated as the Mother of all the Stars of the Big 
		Dipper, embodying celestial motherhood and the generative forces of the 
		cosmos. 
		Dou Mu is known by a 
		multitude of exalted titles that underscore her spiritual grandeur and 
		multifaceted attributes. These elaborate honorifics reflect her 
		transcendence, compassion, and cosmic role. According to ancient Taoist 
		scriptures, Dou Mu was originally a mortal woman named Zi Guang Fu Ren 
		(紫光夫人), meaning ‘Lady 
		of the Purple Radiance’, 
		a beloved concubine of King Zhou Yu (周禹), a legendary ruler during the 
		Longhan (龍漢) period—a mythical era frequently referenced in Taoist 
		texts. She is said to have given birth to nine sons, who were later 
		deified and became associated with the stars of the Big Dipper 
		constellation. 
		In Taoist cosmology, Dou Mu 
		holds an esteemed position among goddesses, comparable in certain 
		respects to Yao Wang (藥王), the Medicine King. Her divine 
		responsibilities encompass healing, fetal protection, fertility, and the 
		expulsion of evil and darkness. She is therefore particularly revered as 
		a goddess of medicine and childbirth, with a special role in 
		safeguarding the wellbeing of offspring and the continuity of family 
		lineage. Her iconography is distinctive: she is typically portrayed with 
		three eyes, three faces, and eight arms, symbolizing her all-seeing 
		wisdom and manifold divine powers. The goddess Dou Mu is celebrated on 
		two dates in the Taoist liturgical calendar, believed to mark her 
		birthdays: the 20th day of the sixth lunar month and the 9th day of the 
		ninth lunar month. These days are observed with offerings, incense 
		rituals, and ceremonial invocations of her protection and grace. In Thai 
		tradition, she is known as Tao Bo Nguen Kun (àµéÒºéÍ˧ǹ¡Ø¹), a 
		localised form equivalent to Mu Yuanjun (斗母元君). Within
		
		Vajrayana
		
			Buddhism, she is conflated with the
		
			bodhisattva
		
		Marici (fig.), 
		who is also revered as the mother of the Dipper, residing at the centre 
		of 
			Brahma's Heaven, the realm of 
		primal cosmic energy. She is a radiant figure whose 
		
		
		vahana 
		is a 
			boar, or who rides a chariot drawn 
		by seven boars (fig.). 
		In Thai, she is ─akin to
						
						Marici─  known as 
		Somdet Phra Maandah Haeng Duang Dao (ÊÁà´ç¨¾ÃÐÁÒÃ´Ò áË觴ǧ´ÒÇ), which 
		translates to ‘Royal Mother of the Stars’. 
			
			 
			WATCH VIDEO, 
			
			
		VIDEO (M) 
			and 
			
			
		VIDEO (MT). 
			
		
		
		回    
           
           
            
		
			
		dragon  
			A mythical, 
			sometimes winged, reptile-like monster able to breathe fire.  
			
			READ ON. 
			 
			
			
			
			
			回  
		
		dragon beard candy  
		
		See
		
		
		kanom nuad mangkon. 
		 
			
		
		回  
		 
		
		dragon eyes  
		Description for the eyes of a 
		
		
              
		      dragon, which are often 
		portrayed protruding and globular. Hence, the term has also become an 
		epithet or nickname used for 
		anything that is reminiscent of their shape, such as the telescope eyes 
		of certain goldfish (fig.),
		
    	
    	
    	
    	lamyai fruits 
		(fig.), etc. In 
		Chinese called
		
		longyan and in Thai known as
		
		tah mangkon. Compare also with the term 
		
		
		tah phlohng used 
		in Thai 
		
		iconography. 
		
			
		
		回  
		
		
		Dragonfish  
		Common name for a kind of freshwater 
		fish, with the scientific designation 
		Scleropages 
		formosus, and that is 
		distributed across Southeast Asia, where it is often found as an 
		aquarium fish (fig.), believed to be 
		auspicious due to certain of 
		its features that resemble those of the  
		
      	
		Chinese dragon. 
		Its habit consists of blackwater rivers, i.e. slow-moving waters that 
		flow through forested swamps and wetlands. This species is also commonly 
		known as 
		Bonytongue, 
		
		Asian Dragon Fish 
		and Asian Arowana, and in 
		Thai it is referred to as 
		pla taphad (»ÅҵоѴ) and 
		pla arowana (ปลาอโรวาน่า). 
		There are several kinds of 
		Dragonfish, including the most common variety Green Arowana (Scleropages 
		formosus); the Silver Asian (Scleropages macrocephalus), which resembles 
		the much slimmer Silver Arowana (Osteoglossum bicirrhosum) from southern 
		America, which widely occurs in Thailand, but only as a popular aquaria 
		fish (fig.); the 
		Red Tail Golden Arowana (Scleropages 
		aureus - 
		fig.), 
		which in Thai is referred to as Arowana Thong Indonesia (ÍÐâÃÇÒ¹èҷͧÍԹⴹÕà«ÕÂ), 
		i.e. ‘Indonesian Golden Arowana’; the Super Red Arowana (Scleropages 
		legendrei - 
		fig.), known in Thai as Arowana Nah Daeng Indonesia (ÍÐâÃÇÒ¹èÒá´§ÍԹⴹÕà«ÕÂ), 
		i.e. ‘Indonesian Red Face Arowana’; 
		the Malayan Bonytongue, in Thai called Arowana Nah Thong Malaey (ÍÐâÃÇÒ¹èҷͧÁÒàÅÂì), 
		i.e. ‘Malayan Gold Face Arowana’; etc.  
		See 
		also POSTAGE STAMP. 
		 
			
		
		回  
			
			
_small.jpg)  
		
		dragonfly  
		
		See
		
		
	malaeng poh. 
		 
			
		
		回   
		
		
		dragon fruit  
			Tropical, turnip-like fruit of some species of 
		cactus.  
		
		
		READ ON. 
		 
			
			
		回  
		
		dragon-horse  
		A 
		mythical creature in between a 
		
              
		      dragon and a horse, and used as a riding 
		animal by
			Sut Saakhon in the story of
		
			Phra Aphaimanih (fig.). In the Chinese 
		epic  
		
		Journey to the West, 
		it is the third son of the Jade Dragon and the mount of the monk Xuanzang, 
		who is also called 
	 
    
    Tripitaka, 
		and known by the name Yulong Santaizi (fig.). In Thai, it is known as
		
		mah nin mangkon 
		or  
		mah mangkon. 
		 
		
			
		
		回   
		
		Dragon King  
		A 
		Chinese 
		
		
              
		      dragon-deity, who is commonly 
		regarded as 
		the ruler of the oceans, and who is able to control the waters and the 
		weather. He lives in an underwater 
		
		
		crystal palace, 
		from where he commands an army of sea creatures. He is usually depicted 
		in stately attire, seated on a throne and wearing an emperor's ritual 
		headdress (fig.), 
		though he may also appear as a gush of water, such as a tornado over 
		water. In the classical novel 
		 
		
          
			Journey to the West, four major Dragon Kings are described, each ruling a 
		sea corresponding to one of the four cardinal directions. In Chinese, 
		known as 
		
		
		Long Wang. See also
		
		
		Na Zha and  
		
		
		Taotie. 
		
			
		
		回   
			 
		 
  
		
		dragon millipede  
			Common name for a genus of spiny millipedes with the scientific name 
			Desmoxytes and belonging to the family of Paradoxosomatidae. There 
			are 24 known species, which are mainly found in Southeast Asia and 
			whereof nine occur in 
			
			Thailand, 
			including the 
			
			Pink 
			Dragon Millipede. In 
			Thai it is called
		
		
		king keuh 
		mangkon.  
			
			
			回  
		
		
		Dragon Paradise Park  
		Name of a Chinese themed 
		park in the city centre of 
			
			Suphanburi 
		featuring a giant 
		
              
		      dragon, 
		whose belly houses the Dragon Descendants Museum (fig.), 
		that displays a brief history of
		mankind and of
		
			China through time, and which begins 
		with the birth of 
			      
			      
			      Pan Gu, 
		the 
	first ever living being and creator of all, who was born 
		from 
					a giant cosmic egg. He 
					
					started creation using a chisel and 
					hammer to separate the top and bottom part of the egg, thus 
					creating heaven and earth, as well as 
					
					
					yin-yang. 
		The park also has 
		a Mahayana Buddhist temple, with several 
		statues of Taoist
		and other deities, as well as 
		
		pagodas, and a Chinese-style shopping area 
		with traditional houses and landscaped gardens. The compound also houses the
			local 
		
			City Pillar shrine, a collection of various full-scale bronze 
		martial art 
		statues of the 
		
		
		Shaolin 
		fighting monks in different
		
		
		Kung Fu 
		poses 
		(fig.), 
		and life-sized bronze statues of the 12 animals of the 
		
      					
      	Chinese zodiac, features 
		akin to those found at 
		
		
		
		Anek Kuson Sala 
		in 
Chonburi 
		(fig.).
		See 
		also 
		
		EXPLORER'S MAP, 
		
		TRAVEL PICTURES (1) 
		and 
		
		(2), 
		
		
		PANORAMA PICTURES (1) 
		and 
		
		(2), 
		
		
		POSTAGE STAMPS, and
		WATCH VIDEO. 
			
		
			回  
					
  
		
		
		dragon pillar  
		A 
		decorative column, usually small-sized and made of stone, specifically marble, granite, 
		
		
			
		porcelain  
		
		or
			
			
			
			terracotta, 
		and carved or decorated with
	
	
		
              
		      dragon
		
		
		
		bas-reliefs 
		(fig.) 
		and cloud scrolls. In Chinese
		
		      
		      iconography,
		
		
		clouds 
		are considered auspicious and symbolize a desirable destiny, as the 
		Chinese word for cloud is homophonous with the Chinese word for 
		
			‘luckiness’.
		It is a characteristic feature in Chinese palace and temple 
		architecture, and usually lines staircases or tops balustrades of 
		bridges (fig.) 
		or those surrounding a building, although it can also be found in a larger size, used as a 
		decorative support pillar inside a temple building, and with or without 
		the decorative cloud scrolls (fig.). 
		Some pillars depict only clouds and no dragons at all, and are hence 
		referred to as cloud pillars.
		
		
    
			
	See also THEMATIC STREET LIGHT.
		
			
		
		回   
        
			
		
  
		
		
		Dragon Scales Fern   
		Common name for a tropical epiphytic fern in 
		the family Polypodiaceae, that is known by the botanical name Pyrrosia piloselloides.
		
		
		
		READ ON. 
		 
			
		
		回  
		
		dragon staircase slab  
		A 
		decorative feature often found in Chinese palace and temple 
		architecture, used to separate the main staircases leading to the 
		complex. It consists of a large, flat slab, usually made of marble or granite, 
		and carved with 
		
		
		bas-reliefs 
		depicting ascending 
		
              
		      dragons and 
		
		
		
		clouds 
		or cloud scrolls, and sometimes also
		
		
		fenghuang, the phoenixes or 
		immortal birds from Chinese mythology (fig.), 
		which are considered the female counterparts of the male dragons, and as 
		such embody the female portion of the  
		
        
		yin-yang principle. Represented together they thus 
		indicate harmony. Staircase slabs are sometimes lined by decorative
		
		
		dragon pillars (fig.), 
		and in the
						
						
	Forbidden City in Beijing (fig.) 
		there is a 16.5 meters long monolithic slab said to weigh around 250 tonnes (fig.). 
		 
		
			
		
		回   
        
			
		
  
		
		dragon's tongue  
			Epithet for the 
			Phyllodium longipes, an evergreen, often multi-stemmed shrub native 
			to southern China, Cambodia, 
			
			
				Laos, 
			
			Myanmar, 
			
			Vietnam, as well as to 
			Thailand, where it is known as klet plah and klet lin yai, meaning ‘fish scales’ and 
			‘long scaly 
            tongue’ respectively. It grows up to two meters high and is 
			recognized by its distinctive long, pendant scaly sepals, that 
			enclose the white to pale yellow flowers (fig.). 
			 
			
			
			回  
        
			
		
%202_small.jpg)  
		 
		
		dragon-tail plant  
		One of several common 
		designations for a 
		kind of climber or ivy often found on tree trunks and 
		with the botanical name 
		
		
		Epipremnum pinnatum 
		(fig.). 
			 
			
		
			回  
		
		
		dragon-tortoise  
		See
     
	
	tao mangkon. 
		
			
		
		回  
			
			
			Dragon Tree Sculpture Garden  
		See 
						 
						
						Wang Theptaroh Daen 
						Mangkon Hom. 
		
			
		
		回  
          
		
			dredger  
			
          See  
			
			reua khut. 
			 
			
			
			回   
			
		drift seed  
		See
		
			
			
		sea bean. 
			
		
		回  
			
			
			drum-shaped bearing stone  
		
		See
		
		
	bearing 
	stones. 
		 
		
			
		
		回  
		
		Drumstick Tree  
		
		1. Nickname for the Cassia fistula, a tree known in Thai as
		
		
		
		rachaphreuk, 
		for its 
		 
		 long, 
		tubular seedpods (fig.). 
		 
			
		
		回     
			
%20Cassia%20fistula_small.jpg)     
2. Nickname for the
		Moringa oleifera, 
a tree known in Thai as
		
	
	ma-rum, due to its 
elongated stick-like seedpods (fig.). 
		 
			
		回  
			
			dtin sin  
			Laotian. A decorative border on a tubular skirt 
			(called sin) in Laos. 
			
			
			回   
			
		duang (ด้วง)  
		
			1. Thai for ‘caterpillar’ (fig.), ‘worm’, ‘grub’, ‘bug’ and ‘weevil’, but 
		also for ‘beetle’ (fig.), 
		alongside
		
		
		malaeng pihk khaeng. With a size of up 
		to 13 centimeters, the largest beetles in Thailand are the three-horned 
		beetles, generally known in Thai as
		
		
		kwahng sahm 
		khao, and in English commonly referred to as Atlas 
		Beetles. They belong to the genus Chalcosoma, which includes the species 
		Chalcosoma caucasus, Chalcosoma atlas and Chalcosoma mollenkampi. See 
		also  
		
			non. 
		 
			
		
		回  
		2. 
		Thai. Name for a two-stringed instrument made from
			
			bamboo, also called
		
		
		so duang.  
			
		
		回  
		3. 
		Thai. A kind of a sweetmeat, made in the shape of a grub and filled with 
		a jam-like paste of fruit, often
		
		
			pineapple. 
		Also called   
		
	
    	
      kanom 
		duang (¢¹Á´éǧ). 
		
			
		
		回    
			
_small.jpg)  
		4. 
		Thai. A kind of animal snare or trap, made from a joint of
			
			bamboo. 
		  
			
		
		回  
		
		
		duang din khob thong daeng (´éǧ´Ô¹¢Íº·Í§á´§)
		  
		Thai. 
		‘Copper-edged Ground
			Beetle’. Thai name for the 
		
		Red-bordered Ground Beetle. 
			
		
		回  
		
		
		duang din pihk phaen (´éǧ´Ô¹»Õ¡á¼è¹)
		  
		Thai. 
		‘Plate-winged Ground
			Beetle’, ‘sheet-winged Ground
			Beetle’ or ‘flake-winged Ground
			Beetle’. Thai Name for the 
		Violin Beetle. 
			
		
		回   
duang kihm fan leuay (´éǧ¤ÕÁ¿Ñ¹àÅ×èÍÂ)   
		Thai. ‘Sawtooth pliers-beetle’. Generic name for any stag beetle within 
the genus Dorcus titanus, known in English as the
Giant Stag Beetle (fig.). 
 
			
回  
		
		
		duang kihm la-mang leuang (´éǧ¤ÕÁÅÐÁÑè§àËÅ×ͧ)
		  
		Thai. Literally ‘yellow 
		
		antelope 
		pliers-beetle’. Name for a kind of stag beetle in the family Lucanidae, 
		with the scientific name Hexarthrius parryi deyrollei.
		It is found in Thailand, and Malaysia. Derived from its Thai 
		common name, it could in English be referred to as 
		Yellow Antelope Beetle. 
		
			
		
		回  
	        									
             
          	 
           
          %20Lucanidae%20stag%20beetle%202_small.jpg)  
		
		duang kihm rong kao 
		(´éǧ¤ÕÁÃèͧà¡èÒ)  
		
		Thai. 
		Literally ‘old grooved pliers-beetle’, yet sometimes described as ‘Old-sculptured 
		Stag Beetle’. Name for a common, small-sized species of stag beetle with the scientific name Aegus 
		chelifer chelifer, and that belongs to the family Lucanidae. Males are 
		overall black, whereas females are slightly lighter, almost grey in 
		colour. Its shield-like, protective wing caps, called elytra, have small 
		grooves along the length, whereas its head and pronotum, i.e. the dorsal 
		front part of the thorax, have tiny indentations that, due to light and 
		especially in juveniles, may look somewhat like silvery spots. Its 
		clawed legs are covered in multiple barbs and hooks. Like most stag 
		beetles, the males have well-developed, distinctive mandibles, which in this 
		species are strongly curved horizontally and which are much smaller in females, who 
		have a somewhat wider and more oval shaped, yet smaller body. This 
		species also possess two feather tipped 
		geniculate antennae, i.e. that are bent in the 
		middle (fig.). Though 
		these beetles are generally around 2-3 centimeters long, some may grow 
		to a length of nearly 4 centimeters. They occur in India, 
		Bangladesh,  
			
			Myanmar, Laos, Cambodia,  
		
		
		Vietnam, The Philippines and in Thailand, where it can 
		often be found in small gardens, even in 
		
		Bangkok.  
			
		
		回   
			
_small.jpg)  
		
		
		duang kihm yihrahf (´éǧ¤ÕÁÂÕÃÒ¿)
		  
		
		Thai. ‘Giraffe pliers-beetle’. Thai Name for the
		
		Giraffe Stag Beetle. 
			
		
		回  
		
		duang kon kradok 
		(´éǧ¡é¹¡Ãд¡)  
		Thai. ‘Tilted-ass beetle’. Name for 
		a small rove beetle measuring 6–10 millimetres, belonging to the 
		subfamily Paederinae. It is so named because its haemolymph contains 
		paederin, a potent toxin released when the beetle comes into contact 
		with skin. This toxin is highly irritating and can cause severe 
		blistering, a condition known as paederus dermatitis. The initial 
		symptoms of exposure include reddening of the skin and a burning 
		sensation, followed by painful irritation and intense itching. If left 
		untreated, the affected area can develop extensive pustules and 
		blistering within four days. The irritation and sores may persist for up 
		to 10 days. Alarmingly, paederin is purported to be 12 times more potent 
		than cobra venom, and contact with the eyes can potentially lead to 
		blindness. Because of their potent effects, these beetles are sometimes 
		nicknamed Dragon Bugs. The species found in Thailand is Paederus 
		fuscipes, which is also commonly referred to in Indonesia as the Tomcat 
		Beetle, or simply Tomcats. The Thai name descriptively refers to the 
		beetle's raised posterior. These beetles are black and orange-brown in 
		colour, with the head, anterior abdomen, and posterior end being black, 
		while the prothorax and mid-abdomen are orange-brown. They possess three 
		pairs of legs, each alternating between orange-brown and black. In 
		Africa, the related species Paederus eximius and P. sabaeus are known as 
		Nairobi Flies. The skin irritation caused by these insects is hence also 
		commonly referred to as ‘Nairobi fly rash’ or ‘beetle burn’. 
			
		
		回    
			
%20´éǧ¡é¹¡Ãд¡%202_small.jpg)  
		
		duang krismas (´éǧ¤ÃÔʵìÁÒÊ)  
		
		Thai 
		for ‘Christmas beetle’, a beetle of the genus Anoplognathus, which 
		includes several different species. The name Christmas beetle derives 
		from Australia, because there they are abundant around Christmas, in the 
		southern hemisphere's summer months. Christmas beetles have a glossy, 
		often metallic elytra (the hardened forewings that give beetles their 
		Thai name, i.e.
		
		
		malaeng pihk khaeng), pronotum (the 
		dorsal front part of the thorax) and clypeus (the hardened 
		body part that makes up the face), as well as clawed legs that are covered in multiple 
		barbs.  
			
		
		回  
			
%20Christmas%20beetle%202_small.jpg)  
			
			
			duang kwahng (´éǧ¡ÇèÒ§)  
		 Thai generic name for 
		weevil, but also a prefix used in the Thai name for the 
			 
			
			 
			rhinoceros beetle, 
		which is fully known as 
			
		
		duang 
		
		
		kwahng ha khao 
		and duang 
		kwahng sahng neua (´éǧ¡ÇèÒ§«Ò§à˹×Í). 
			
			
		
			回   
		
			
			duang maprao (ด้วงมะพร้าว)  
			
			Thai. 
			‘Coconut beetle’. Thai name for the 
			Asian Palm Weevil (Rhynchophorus ferrugineus), which is also 
			commonly known as Red Palm Weevil, Red-stripes Palm Weevil, and Sago 
			Palm Weevil. They are excellent fliers and are 
			able to travel great distances, and are one of the most destructive 
			insect pests of palm trees. Adults are a rusty red with black 
			markings and around 3 centimetres long and have an 
			  
			elongated snout known as a rostrum. They are sexually dimorphic, with males 
			having more and larger black markings and females being slightly 
			larger and wider than males. Their larvae are thick (fig.) 
			and larger than the adults. The grubs are considered a delicacy in 
			Thai cuisine and are especially farmed for this purpose, becoming 
			increasingly popular as commercial animals, with a trading price in 
			2022 as high as 500 baht per kilogram. The time to develop from egg 
			to larval grub 
			ready for consumption is about 30 days. In Vietnam, the 
			Red Palm Weevil larva is usually eaten alive with
			
		fish sauce. Also 
			known as duang sakhoo (´éǧÊÒ¤Ù), duang lahn (´éǧÅÒ¹), and in 
			Southern Thailand maeng wang (áÁ§ËÇѧ).
			 
			
			
			
			WATCH VIDEO (1) 
			and
			
			(2). 
			
			
			
			回  
			
_small.jpg)  
		
		duang nguang (´éǧ§Ç§)  
		Thai. ‘Trunk beetle’. Generic name for any kind of weevil, a species of 
		generally small beetles, which worldwide has over 60,000 genera in 
		several families, mostly in the family Curculionidae, which members are 
		also known as the true weevils or snout beetles (fig.), 
		due to the rostrum, i.e. a trunk-like 
		muzzle characteristic of most weevils. Many species
		
		
		also have geniculate, i.e. L-shaped, antennae with 
		small clubs. In Thai Also called
		
		
		mod. 
		 
			
		
		回   
			
_small.jpg)   
duang nguang khao (´éǧ§Ç§¢éÒÇ)   
		Thai. ‘Rice weevil’. Name for a species of weevil (duang nguang), 
with the scientific designation Sitophilus oryzae, and a known pest that attacks 
stored rice (khao), 
i.e. 
	
khao san, as 
well as other stored cereal crops. It is very tiny, measuring only about 2 
millimeters (fig.). 
Its colour is overall blackish-brown, with four vague, reddish-orange spots 
arranged in a cross, on the wing covers. Its body also has punctures, tiny 
indentations that, due to light, may look somewhat like whitish to silvery 
spots. The female rice weevil uses strong mandibles to make a hole into a grain 
kernel, where she then deposits a single egg and then seals. The larva develops 
within the grain, hollowing it out whilst feeding, and about two to four days 
later pupates and emerges. Females lay between two and six eggs per day and up 
to 300 eggs over their lifetime. Rice weevils may live for up to 2 years. Also 
known as  
		
mod khao san. 
 
			
		
回   
			
%20´éǧ§Ç§¢éÒÇ,%20ÁÍ´¢éÒÇÊÒÃ%203_small.jpg)  
		
		
		duang nuad yao (´éǧ˹ǴÂÒÇ)   
		
		Thai. ‘Long-whiskered Beetle’. Generic name for any species of 
		long-horned beetle in the family Cerambycidae, that also occurs in 
		Thailand and and of which there are many varieties, including the 
		species Macrochenus isabellinus (fig.),
		Diastocera wallichi 
		tonkinensis (fig.), 
		Macrotoma crenata, Meriodeda melichroos, Mesosa similis, Misphila 
		curvinea, Monochamus punctifrons, Niphona rondoni, etc.
		
			
		
		回  
		
		
		duang nuad yao kho malaai (´éǧ˹ǴÂÒǤÍÁéÒÅÒÂ)   
		Thai. ‘Long-whiskered Zebra-necked Beetle’. Name for a kind of 
		long-horned beetle, with the scientific name Macrochenus isabellinus (fig.) and belonging to the family Cerambycidae. 
		It is mostly pale yellow with pink and has black dots on its
			elytra, whilst the prothorax and the head both have black stripes. 
		Its long antennae and legs are greyish black. It occurs in mainland 
		Southeast Asia en southern 
		
		      
		      
		      China. 
		
		
See also WILDLIFE PICTURES. 
		
		
		回  
			
			
  
		
		duang 
		nuad yao ngao lang yon (´éǧ˹ǴÂÒÇà§ÒËÅѧÂè¹)  
		
		Thai. ‘Long-whiskered Shaded Back Wrinkled [Bark] Beetle’. Name for a 
		kind of long-horned borer beetle, with the scientific name Aeolesthes 
		aurifaber and belonging to the family Cerambycidae.
		
			
		
		回    
          	 
           
          _small.jpg)  
		
		duang nuad yao 
		thahaan (´éǧ˹ǴÂÒÇ·ËÒÃ)  
		Thai. ‘Long-whiskered Soldier Beetle’. Name for the Diastocera wallichi 
		tonkinensis, a kind of medium-sized long-horned beetle found in
		
		
		China,
		
		
		
		
    Laos, 
		 
		
		Vietnam and 
		 
		
		
			Thailand. 
		 
		
		
		See also WILDLIFE PICTURES. 
		 
			
		
		回    
          	 
           
          _small.jpg)  
		
		duan xiu (断袖)  
		
		Chinese. ‘Cut sleeve’. A slang term for ‘gay’ or ‘homosexual’, that 
		derives from a story of the gay emperor Han Aidi (real name Liu Xin), 
		who favoured the minor official Dong Xian. Their relationship is 
		referred to as , duan xiu zhi pi (斷袖之癖) meaning 
		‘the passion of the cut 
		sleeve’, after a story that one afternoon, after falling asleep for a 
		nap on the same bed, the emperor cut off his sleeve rather than disturb 
		the sleeping Dong Xian, when he had to get out of bed. In
		
		Pinyin duàn xiù. 
		 
			
		
		回  
		
		
		duckweed  
		See
		
		
		jok haen. 
		 
			
		
		回  
			
			
			
			dugong  
		Name a medium-sized herbivorous 
		marine mammal with the scientific designation Dugong dugon. It is the 
		only surviving species in the family Dugongidae, 
		which belongs 
		to the order of Sirenia, commonly referred to as sea cows due to their 
		strictly herbivorous nature. The dugong is 
		also known as Indian sea cow and in Thai it is called 
		 
		
		pha-yoon.
		Its closest modern relative, 
		i.e. the Steller's sea cow (Hydrodamalis gigas), was hunted to extinction in 
		the 18th century. The Dugong
		inhabits coastal marine 
		waters from the western Pacific Ocean to the eastern coast of Africa. 
		They are depicted on the backside of 
 
Trang's 
		Coat of Arms and Local Heritage Coin (fig.), 
		and it features in a 
		sculpture in front of Trang's Provincial Hall 
		(fig.). 
		
See also POSTAGE STAMPS. 
		 
			
		
		回  
		  
           
           
          _small.jpg)  
			
		
			dukha (दुःख)  
			
			Sanskrit. The first of the  
			 
			Four Noble Truths of 
			 
			 
			Buddhism meaning 
			‘suffering, unhappiness, misery’. In Pali spelled dukkha.  
			
			
			回  
			
			dukkha 
			(दुक्ख)  
			
			Pali for  
			 
			dukha. 
			 
			
			
			回   
			
		dun shou (蹲兽)  
		Chinese. 
		‘Crouching beasts’ or ‘squatting beasts’. A name for 
		
		
		Chinese Imperial roof decoration. 
			
		
		回  
			
			
			Duo Wen Tian (多闻天)  
			Chinese. 
			‘Multi-hearing deity’, ‘lord who hears all’ or the ‘god that hears 
			everything’. Name of one of the 
			
			
			Four Heavenly Kings, 
			i.e. the 
			
			King of the North. He is also King of the 
			
			
			
			Yakshas and 
			rules over the continent of Uttarakuru from his palace of crystal. He correspondents with the Indian 
			 
			
			
			
			
	lokapala 
			
			
			Kubera 
			or 
			
Vaisravana,
			and is  
			
			actually the leader of 
			the Four Heavenly Kings.  Sometimes he is depicted alone, but 
			represents all four. 
			In Chinese tradition, his attributes are 
			either an umbrella, which symbolizes 
			his protection 
			of the 
			
			
			Dharma,
			or a Chinese halberd known as 
			
  
			
	ji 
			and a 
			
			
            
			pagoda (fig.). 
			Compare with 
			
Thien Khuyen, 
the Vietnamese Judge of the Heavens (fig.). 
			 
			
			
			
			回  
			 
          	 
          	 
          _small.jpg)  
			 
			Durga 
			(दुर्गा)  
			Sanskrit. 
			‘Inaccessible’. A form of   
			
			Devi, 
			  
			 
			Shiva's 
			consort, who is usually portrayed with multiple arms and riding one 
			of her vehicles known as
  
			
			
			
                vahana 
			(fig.), 
			i.e. a
			tiger
			(fig.) or 
			a  
			 
			lion 
			(fig.). In Javanese and Indian art, 
            she is frequently depicted in her form as
Mahishasuramardini, slaying the 
			 
			 
			buffalo demon 
			 
			 
			Mahishasura with 
            divine weapons (fig.), and in Nepal she may be depicted with multiple arms, 
			four heads and wearing a garland of human heads (fig.). 
			 
			
			
			回   
           
           
            
			
			
			durian
			  
			A fruit of the genus 
			Durio of which different variations exist. 
			
			
			
			READ ON. 
			 
			
			
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		Dusidalai (´ØÊÔ´ÒÅÑÂ)  
		Thai. Name of a hall 
		 
		in 
		
		      
		      
		Chitralada 
		 
		Villa, the Royal Residence of King 
		
	
	
		      Bhumipon Adunyadet
		 
		at 
		
		
		Dusit
		 
		Palace, usually referred to as 
		
			      
		Sala
		 
		Dusidalai, and in English as Dusidalai 
		Pavilion 
		or Dusidalai Hall.
		 
			
			
		
		回   
		
		Dusit (ดุสิต)  
			1. 
			Sanskrit-Thai. ‘Satisfied’ of ‘fulfilled’. The term refers to the heaven above 
			 
			 
			Mt. Meru where the  
			 
			 
			bodhisattvas await their last existence on earth, 
			prior to the  
		      
		      anchern jut.
            It is one of the highest heavens in Buddhist cosmology, and the heaven in which 
            the bodhisattva who would later become the  
			 
			 
			Buddha was 
			reborn, 
              after gaining sufficient merit in previous lives. It is the last place where he 
              stayed before being born as prince 
			 
			Siddhartha, as well as the heaven where 
			the future 
			 
			 
			Maitreya  
			 
			 
			buddha dwells. In 
			
		      Hinduism it is the fourth heaven. 
            Also   
			 
			Tusita
			  and 
			  
			 
			Tushita. 
			
			
			回  
			 
			2.   Sanskrit-Thai. A 
            district in 
			
			Bangkok with several places of interest, including 
			 
			
			
			Dusit Zoo,  
			  
			 
			Vimanmek 
			Palace and the present Royal Palace,  
			which includes
			 
		
		
		
			Phra 
			Tihnang Amphon Sathaan, for one. 
			 
			
			
			回    
		3.   
		Sanskrit-Thai.  
		
		Name of 
		the
		
			
			 
		 
		Royal Palace in 
		
		Bangkok, which includes 
		
		
		
		
			Phra 
			Tihnang Amphon Sathaan (fig.), 
		where  
		Crown 
		 
		 
		Prince Maha Vajiralongkorn  
		was born. 
		Officially, the building is today no longer inhabited and has been used 
		as a shrine for important statues and 
		
		
        Buddha images, 
		after 
		his King  
	
	
		      Bhumipon Adunyadet 
		took up residence in  
		
		Chitralada Palace, 
		the King's de facto primary residence and officially a part of the Dusit 
		Palace. 
However, the palace was restored and when around 2014, the Standard (fig.) 
		of
			
		 
		Crown Prince Maha Vajiralongkorn can 
		occasionally be seen flying from the flagpole in the inner court, there 
		are rumours that he might have moved from his official residence, i.e. 
		the 
		
		Sukhothai Palace.
		
			
		
		回  
		
		
		Dusit Maha Prasat (´ØÊÔµÁËÒ»ÃÒÊÒ·)
		  
		Thai. Name of a Throne and Audience 
		Hall, which is located within the compound of the 
		
	      
	Grand Palace in
		
		
		Bangkok. 
		
		
		
		
		READ ON. 
		 
		
			
		
		回  
		
		
		Dusit Zoo  
		The 
		oldest zoo of Thailand, created in 1895 by King
		
		
            
			Rama V, initially as his private botanical garden. It is 
		built adjacent to   
		
		
		Dusit royal palace, at a spot locally known as 
		
		
		
		khao din wa-nah, 
		which means
			‘earthen forest hill’. It is about 118
		
		
			rai
		large and forma an oasis of green in the capital, complete with a huge 
		lake. On 3 January 1900, King Rama V presented the visiting prince 
		Vladimir of Denmark with a
			
			
		
		teak 
			tree and a stone inscription in his botanical 
		garden, as a tribute to his visit to
		
		
			Siam (fig.). 
		After the king's death, the garden was left unattended for many years, 
		until March 1938, when the government under  
			
			Phibun Songkram
		asked King
		
		
			Rama VIII 
		permission to convert the domain into a public zoo. The young 
		king, then still a student in Switzerland, consequently handed it over 
		to the 
		
		
		Bangkok 
		City Municipality and in addition donated a number 
		animals from the palace for public exhibition, including some Spotted 
		Deer or Axis Deer (Axis axis), the offspring of animals brought back 
		from Indonesia by King Rama V, when he visited Java in 1908. The Bangkok 
		City Municipality administered the zoo until 1954, after which it was 
		transferred to the state Zoological Park Organization, which also 
		operates most other major zoos in the country. Today, the zoo is said to 
		contain about 1,340 animals and attract 2.5 million visitors annually. 
		It remains under royal patronage and members of the royal family have 
		donated a number animals for public exhibition, including a unique white
		 
		
		Barking Deer (fig.). 
		In Thai known as  
		
		Suan Sat Dusit, 
		but by the local population usually called khao din, short for khao din 
		wa-nah. Dusit Zoo closed definitely at the end of August 2018, when the 
		area was allocated to a new project and a new zoo planned to open in 
		
			      Pathum Thani 
		on land donated by the King.  
		
		See MAP.  
		
		回  
			
			
			
%20Dusit%20Zoo,%20Bangkok_small.jpg)  
		
		
		Dusky Broadbill  
		Common name for a species of passerine bird in the 
		family Eurylaimidae and with the scientific designation Corydon 
		sumatranus.  
		
		READ ON. 
		  
		
		回  
		
		
		Dusky Leaf Monkey  
		 
		A species of primate in the Cercopithecidae family 
		with the scientific name Trachypithecus obscurus.  
		
		
		READ ON. 
		 
		
			
			
		
		
		回  
		
		Dutch East India Company  
		Name 
		of the first multinational corporation in the world, established in 1602 
		by the States-General of the Netherlands, to carry out trading 
		activities in the Far East and South Asia. 
		 
		
		
		READ ON. 
		 
			
		
		回    
			
			Dvapara 
			(द्वापर)  
			
			Sanskrit. 
			 The third of the four 
			  
			 
			yugas. 
			 
			
			
			回  
			
			dvarapala 
			(द्वारपाल)  
			Sanskrit. 
			‘Janitor’. A guardian of a temple entrance
            (fig.), 
            often holding a weapon (fig.), usually a club or mace (gada). 
			In Thai, the term for dvarapala is 
			  
			
			thawaanbaan, 
			which derives from the Pali words thawaan and paan (»ÒÅ), which mean 
			‘door’ or ‘gate’, and ‘to look after’ or ‘to guard’, respectively. 
			The term thawaanbaan often refers to any of the giant or demon, i.e. 
			
		      
		      yak 
			guardians, found at entrances (fig.). 
			The 
			
		      
		      
		      Four Heavenly Kings
			
Si Tian Wang of 
    
	Mahayana Buddhism and also found in
			
			Taoism, 
			are considered Chinese-style dvarapala. In Bali, door guardians are 
			fierce-looking and known as 
			
			
			Bedogol
			(fig.). See also 
			
			
			darwaza. 
			
			
			
			回   
			 
            
			
			Dvaravati (ทวารวดี)  
			
			1. 
            Thai. Name of a former kingdom in Thailand that existed between the 
			6th and 11th century AD and consisted of a 
            number of loose small city states and populated by the   
			
			Mon people. 
			 
			
			
			回  
			2. Thai. Name of the art produced in the period between the 6th and 11th 
			century AD in 
            the Kingdom of Dvaravati. 
    
			
	See also THEMATIC STREET LIGHT. 
			
			
			回  
			
  
		
		
		Dvija (द्विजा)  
		Sanskrit. ‘Twice-born’. Members of any of three upper
		
		
		castes, i.e. the three twice-born 
		classes of the   
		
		
        
		Brahman,
		
		
	Kshatriya and
		
		
    Vaishya, whereas members of the
		
		
		
		Shudra, 
		the lowest class, are considered to have been born just only once and to 
		have no second birth. Besides this, the term is also used for any
		
		
        Aryan. 
		 
			
		
		回  
		
		
		Dwarf Umbrella Tree  
		Common designation of a 
		free-standing evergreen shrub with the scientific botanical name 
		Schefflera arboricola that grows to about 8 to 9 meter tall, and might 
		cling to the trunks of other trees as an epiphyte. Its leathery leaves 
		are shiny green and smooth on the upper surface and somewhat lighter and 
		matte on the underside. The palmately compound leaves grow around the 
		stalk in a circular fashion, with the top leaflets somewhat shorter than 
		the ones at the bottom. This shrub bears berry-like fruits that grow on 
		a cluster of oval druping branches, and change colour from 
		yellowish-orange to reddish-violet as the fruits mature, and 
		though inedible to humans, they may be consumed and spread elsewhere by 
		various birds and other animals. In Thai, it is known as nuad pla meuk 
		krae dahng (˹Ǵ»ÅÒËÁÖ¡á¤ÃдèÒ§). 
			
		
		回   
			
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