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HARA nstresses
econ. гиперболическая абсолютная несклонность к риску (Hyperbolic Absolute Risk Aversion Bazhanov)
med. человеческие антитела против кроличьих антигенов (tahana); человеческие антитела против антигенов кролика (tahana)
hara n
gen. хара (altitudinal belt with herbaceous vegetation in Japan)
Gruzovik, bot. хара ломкая (altitudinal belt with herbaceous vegetation in Japan)
Makarov. горный пояс луговой растительности (в Японии); хара (горный пояс луговой растительности в Японии)
Hara n
dril. хараган (Haragan; свита нижнего девона, Среднеконтинентальный район)
rel., budd. Хара («устранитель», имя Шивы)
harae n
relig. хараи (обряды очищения)
 English thesaurus
HARA abbr.
abbr. Hyperbolic Absolute Risk Aversion
abbr., el. high altitude radar altimeter
abbr., qual.cont. Hazard Analysis and Risk Assessment (DVKub)
tech. high-altitude radar altimeter
Harae n
relig. Purification, purity, the converse of kegare, pollution. Harae is a general term for ceremonies of purification designed to counter misfortune and pollution and restore ritual purity. Sprinkling water on face and hands (temizu) when entering a shrine is a simple form of harae which helps render the shrine visitor fit to approach the kami. Types of harae are performed at the beginning of all Shinto ceremonies and in situations where there is a special need for purification, e.g. to avert disasters, before starting a new enterprise, after death, at new year (shogatsu), at jichinsai etc.. Water, salt and the waving of a haraigushi are commonly used as purifying agents in harae rites. The concept is central to Shinto thought, with many local and lineage interpretations. Harae may mean an extended process of shugyō or ascetic training including physical purification of the body inside and out (cleansing with salt or water; fasting or eating special foods; sexual abstinence) or purification of the soul (mitama) by forms of meditation, ritual or shugyō, traditionally secret and often derived from Buddhism or neo-Confucianism. See Oharae, Misogi, Shubatsu, Chinkon-sai, Tama-shizume, (mi)Tama-furi A Popular Dictionary of Shinto (Brian Bocking)
HARA: 49 phrases in 9 subjects
American usage, not spelling1
Buddhism1
Chess2
General39
Literature1
Mass media1
Medical1
Names and surnames2
Proper name1