yogi

listen to the pronunciation of yogi
İngilizce - Türkçe
yoga yapan
{i} yoga sofusu
{i} yogi
yoga felsefesine kendini vermiş kimse
yogis
yogiler
Türkçe - Türkçe
Yoga felsefesini uygulayan kimse
Yoga felsefesini uygulayan derviş
YOGİ
(Osmanlı Dönemi) Hindistan'da çilecilere (yogalara) verilen isim
İngilizce - İngilizce
Attributive form of yogi

It's a yogi trick of some sort.

Someone, typically a Hindu, who has achieved a high level of spiritual insight, often through the use of yoga
One who has achieved union with God
United States baseball player (born 1925)
One who has attained a state of yoga, a master of him/her self, person who practices the art and science of yoga
(Tib naljorpa) A buddhist practitioner who engages in intensive meditation and yogic practices; often refers to someone who has gained realization
A master of the Hindi spiritual disciplines (yoga) who teaches those disciplines to others They are the key to passing these disciplines down through the generations Modern yogis often introduce their own variations, especially with meditative techniques Yogis are said to have a spiritual power which is found in the base of the spine
one who practices yoga and has achieved a high level of spiritual insight
practitioner of yoga
One who practises yoga
adept in yoga; practitioner
A follower of the yoga philosophy; an ascetic
(male) or yogini (female): Someone dedicated to the discipline of balancing mind and body through yoga
or yogin - Yoga practitioner Yogin is the root form, yogi is the nominative (subject) form Can also define one has reached the state of yoga
one who practices prolonged yoga or ascetism to gain control over the body and mind
{i} one who practices Yoga; adherent of the Yoga philosophy; teacher of Yoga
Someone who practices yoga
practitioner of yoga, a Hindu practice of meditation and exercises designed to achieve spiritual insight and tranquility
one who practices yoga
One who practices yoga; one who has attained the goal of yogic practices
A person who practices spiritual disciplines
(v) to obtain food from non-hikers without asking, usually by enthralling them with tales of the hike and looking pitifully hungry; said to work especially well with the tourists in Shenandoah National Park
A yogi is a person who has spent many years practising the philosophy of yoga, and is considered to have reached an advanced spiritual state. someone who has a lot of knowledge about yoga, and who often teaches it to other people (yogin, from yoga; YOGA). Berra Yogi Kanphata Yogi Maharishi Mahesh Yogi
(Skt ; Tib = neljorpa) Practitioner of yoga (also female, yogini, neljorma) In Tibet, generally refers to lay Tantric practitioners, though monks and nuns also perform Tantric yoga
Yogi Bear
a US television cartoon character who has been popular since the 1960s. Yogi is a clever bear who lives in Jellystone Park and, with his friend Boo-Boo, is always trying to steal food from the tourists there
Yogi Berra
of the American League in 1951, 1954, and 1956. He later became a coach, and he is famous for saying "It ain't over till it's over" (1925- ) a famous US baseball player for the New York Yankees team from 1946 to the 1960s, who was the MVP (=most valuable player). orig. Lawrence Peter Berra born May 12, 1925, St. Louis, Mo., U.S. U.S. baseball player, manager, and coach. Berra joined the New York Yankees in 1946 and served as the team's regular catcher from 1949 until his retirement in 1963. He was named the American League's Most Valuable Player in 1951, 1954, and 1955. He caught in more World Series games (75) than any other catcher and hit 20 or more home runs a season through 1958. He managed the Yankees in 1964 but was fired and became a coach and manager (1965-75) with the New York Mets. He returned to the Yankees as a coach (1976-82) and later manager (1983-85). He was known for idiosyncratic remarks such as "It ain't over till it's over" and "It's déjà vu all over again." The American cartoon character Yogi Bear was named for him
Kanphata Yogi
Member of an order of religious ascetics that venerate the Hindu god Shiva. They are followers of Gorakhnath, a master yogi of the 12th century or earlier. Their ideology incorporates elements of magic, mysticism, and alchemy absorbed from both Hindu and Buddhist esoteric systems. Members focus on acquiring supernatural powers rather than following the more orthodox practices of meditation and devotion. They are distinguished by large earrings worn in the hollow of the ear
Maharishi Mahesh Yogi
v. orig. Mahad Prasad Varma born 1911?, India Indian religious leader, founder of Transcendental Meditation (TM). He took a degree in physics before going to the Himalayas to study the Advaita school of Vedanta religious thought with the yogi Guru Dev for 13 years. He arrived in the U.S. in 1959, preaching the virtues of TM; in the 1960s the Beatles were perhaps his most celebrated followers. The Maharishi (the title means "Great Sage") returned to India in the late 1970s and moved to The Netherlands in 1990. His organization, which includes real estate holdings, schools, and clinics, was worth more than $3 billion in the late 1990s
yogis
plural of yogi
Türkçe - İngilizce
yogi
yogiler
yogis
yogi

    Heceleme

    yo·gi

    Türkçe nasıl söylenir

    yōgi

    Telaffuz

    /ˈyōgē/ /ˈjoʊɡiː/

    Etimoloji

    () From Sanskrit yogī, the -in adjective of the verbal root yuj (class 7 present yunakti "to connect"), from a Proto-Indo-European root ''*yug-. In English from the 17th century in the spellings Ioggue, Ioggui, Jogui. In the 19th century as Yoguee, Yogee, jogee. The spelling yogi is attested as a variant from the 1820s, but coexists with jogi and others until the early 20th century. The spelling yogin is the correct rendition of the uninflected Sanskrit n-stem (while yogī is properly the nominative), and appears in English spelling from the 1840s.