(अवधूत avadhūta) is a Sanskrit term from some Indian religions or Dharmic Traditions referring to a type of mystic or saint who is beyond egoic-consciousness, duality and common worldly concerns and acts without consideration for standard social etiquette. Such personalities "roam free like a child upon the face of the Earth" (wiki).
अव 'ava':
favour; off, away, down.
धूत 'dhUta':
shaken, stirred, agitated; "rinsed"; fanned, kindled; shaken off, removed, destroyed; judged; reproached; [neut.] morality
अव-धूत 'avadhUta':
"shaken off (as evil spirits)"; removed, shaken away; discarded, expelled, excluded; disregarded, neglected, rejected; touched; shaken, agitated (especially as plants or the dust by the wind), fanned; that upon which anything unclean has been shaken out or off; unclean; one who has shaken, off from themselves worldly feeling and obligation, a philosopher; [neut.] rejecting, repudiating
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tattva-vidya-shastra:
"discipline of knowing reality" (one modern sanskrit term for philosophical enquiry -- the language having no straightforward equivalents for 'philosophy' or 'religion')
sukha:
skt. for happiness, comfort, ease, pleasure, bliss, light, space.
fr. Su(good) & kha (“sky,” “ether,” “space,” orig. “hole,” particularly an axle hole of one of the Aryan’s vehicles, thus “having a good axle hole,” while dukkha meant “having a poor axle hole,” leading to discomfort
Megbe (African):
life force exists in blood and bones
Tirawa (Pawnee):
'force which moves all things'
Awen (Welsh):
"(poetic) inspiration"; also considered a force or
energy forged from an indivisible source that is the power behind the
physical
Asha (Avestan):
'truth', 'existence', 'right working', "the decisive confessional
concept of Zoroastrianism" (in Vedic language ṛta). "The correspondence between 'truth',
reality, and an all-encompassing cosmic principle is not far removed
from Heraclitus' conception of Logos." (wiki)
Ichor (Gk):
ἰχώρ is the ethereal golden fluid that is the blood of the gods
and/or immortals