検索ワード: eyes are useless when the mind is blind (英語 - タミル語)

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英語

eyes are useless when the mind is blind

タミル語

மனம் குருடாக இருக்கும்போது கண்கள் பயனற்றவை

最終更新: 2021-10-14
使用頻度: 1
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英語

the mind is everything what you think become

タミル語

நீங்கள் ஆகிறீர்கள் என்று நீங்கள் நினைப்பது எல்லாம் மனம்

最終更新: 2020-04-28
使用頻度: 1
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参照: 匿名

英語

the mind is everything what you think you become

タミル語

நாம் என்ன நினைக்கிறோமோ அதுவாகவே ஆகிறோம்

最終更新: 2022-01-26
使用頻度: 1
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英語

the mind is the simlilar to the muscles of the body

タミル語

உடலின் தசைகளுக்கு ஸ்மிலிலர் என்று மனதில் மனம் வருகின்றது

最終更新: 2017-07-25
使用頻度: 1
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英語

but when the eyes are dazzled,

タミル語

ஆகவே, பார்வையும் மழுங்கி-

最終更新: 2014-07-03
使用頻度: 1
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英語

the mind is everthing. what you think, you become buddha

タミル語

மனம் எப்போதும்

最終更新: 2020-05-26
使用頻度: 1
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英語

i'm doing nothingi had been staying with a friend of mine, an artist and delightfully lazy fellow, at his cottage among the yorkshire fells, some ten miles from a railway-station; and as we had been fortunate enough to encounter a sudden spell of really warm weather, day after day we had set off in the morning, taken the nearest moorland track, climbed leisurely until we had reached somewhere about two thousand feet above sea-level, and had then spent long golden afternoon lying flat on our backs – doing nothing. there is no better lounging place than a moor. it is a kind of clean bare antechamber to heaven. beneath its apparent monotony that offers no immediate excitement, no absorbing drama of sound and colour, there is subtle variety in its slowly changing patterns of cloud and shadow and tinted horizons, sufficient to keep up a flicker of interest in the mind all day. with its velvety patches, no bigger than a drawing-room carpet, of fine moorland grass, its surfaces invite repose. its remoteness, its permanence, its old and sprawling indifference to man and his concerns, rest and cleanse the mind. all the noises of the world are drowned in the one monotonous cry of the curlew. day after day, then, found us full-stretched upon the moor, looking up at the sky or gazing dreamily at the distant horizon. it is not strictly true, of course, to say that we did absolutely nothing, for we smoked great quantities of tobacco, ate sandwiches and little sticks of chocolate, drank from the cold bubbling streams that spring up from nowhere, gurgle for a few score yards, then disappear again. occasionally we exchanged a remark to two. but we probably came as close to doing nothing as it is possible for two members of our race. we made nothing, not even any plans; not a single idea entered our heads; we did not even indulge in that genial boasting which is the usual pastime of two friendly males in conference. somewhere, far away, our friends and relatives were humming and bustling, shaping and contriving, planning, disputing, getting, spending; but we were gods, solidly occupied in doing nothing, our minds immaculate vacancies. but when our little hour of idling was done and we descended for the last time, as flushed as sunsets, we came down into this world of men and newspaper owners only to discover that we had just been denounced by mr gordon selfridge. when and where he had been denouncing us i do not know. nor do i know what hilarious company had invited and received his conferences. strange things happen at this season, when the unfamiliar sun ripens our eccentricities. it was only last year or the year before that some enterprising person who had organized a conducted tour to the continental arranged, as bait for the more intellectual holiday-makers, that a series if lectures should be given to the party by eminent authors at various places en route. the happy tourists set out, and their conductor was as good as his word, for behold – at the very first stopping-place dean inge gave them an address on the modern love of pleasure. but whether mr selfridge had been addressing a crowd of holiday-makers or a solemn conference of emporium owners, i do not know, but i do know that he said that he hated laziness more than anything else and held it the greatest of sins. i believe too that he delivered some judgment on persons who waste time, but i have forgotten his reasons and instances and, to be frank, would count it a disgraceful waste of time to discover again what they were. mr selfridge did not mention us by name, but it is hardly possible to doubt that he had us in mind throughout his attack on idleness. perhaps he had had a frantic vision of the pair of us lying flat on our backs on the moor, wasting time royally while the world’s work waited to be done, and, incidentally, to be afterwards bought and sold in mr selfridge’s store. i hope he had, for the sight should have done him good; we are a pleasing spectacle at any time, but when we are doing nothing it would do any man’s heart good to see us, even in the most fragmentary and baffling vision.

タミル語

நான் ஒன்றும் செய்வதில்லை

最終更新: 2021-10-26
使用頻度: 2
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参照: 匿名

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