It means "clumsy lout".
As in:
"Out of my way, asho!"
2007-03-19 09:58:20
·
answer #1
·
answered by Anonymous
·
2⤊
0⤋
Asian Society of Hyperthermic Oncology (ASHO)
Asho Zarathushtra :
bonny boy was born to Dughdav and Pourushaspa Spitâma on a fine morning of early spring 3,767 years ago. He was their third son. They named him Zarathushtra to rhyme with the names of his two elder brothers -- Rataushtra and Rangushtra. The Spitâmas were a prosperous cattle-raising family and lived near the bank of a river, later called Dâiti, the Lawful, in Airyana Vaeja, once northeastern Iran and now in Central Asia. Dughdav was an exceptionally open-minded, bright lady. She took care of Zarathushtra’s education and provoked in him the desire to search and discover. She set him on the road to discover truth, the truth.
Provoked to discover truth, Zarathushtra discovered Mazda Ahura , literally The Super-Intellect Being, a god so different from human-visualized gods, a god transcendental and yet so close as to be a beloved, a god very impersonal in mind but very personal in thought, a god that means only good. A Super-Intellect that wisely creates, sustains, maintains, and promotes Its creation. A Super-Intellect that is spenishta mainyu, the Most Progressive Mind, the most increasing mentality and not a static godhead. A Super-Intellect that communes with Its creations and inspires them through seraosha, the inner-voice within them. A Super-Intellect that has granted freedom of thought, will, word, action, and choice to creations and endowed them with good mind, truth, power, and peace to prosper and progress to wholeness and immortality.
Zarathushtra's one discovery, the best, Mazda, provided him with all the principles of the good life on this earth and beyond. Provoked by his mother when he was a child, he became Mânthran, thought-provoker par excellence for humanity. He laid the foundation of his universal religion, Daenâ Vanguhi, the religion of Good Conscience, the religion that means constant progress, continuous modernization toward eternal bliss.
Very few of the founders of religions and doctrines have lived long enough to see their mission completed as desired. Very few of them have passed away satisfied with the progress of the task begun by them. Asho Zarathushtra is one of those very few. He proclaimed his divine mission at the age of thirty; successfully withstood all the difficulties created by his enemies, the priests and princes of the old cult for a good ten years; took two full years to convince King Vishtaspa and his sagacious court of the truth of his mission; and passed thirty-seven happy years in working and watching his task bearing increasing fruit. He died a very happy and satisfied person at the age of, a tradition says, seventy-seven years and forty days.
....all the best.
2007-03-22 05:53:08
·
answer #2
·
answered by popcandy 4
·
0⤊
1⤋
Well, It means in Japanese,..................NAW! I'M not going to answer this one! I'm already in enough trouble!!!!!!!!!!
2007-03-19 17:07:48
·
answer #4
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
1⤋