sTAma
sthāma(n) , nt. , see also thāma (= Pali thāma; no s-stem forms like Pali thāmasā noted in BHS ; recorded rarely in late Skt. , see Renou, JA. 1939 , 372 n. 1 ), strength, power ; often assoc. with bala, vīrya: °ma Mvy 5152 = Tib. mthu (seems the common rendering) or stobs ; LV 109.12 ( vs , sthāmāsya = °ma-asya); 154.21 ( acc. ; so best mss. , most mss. °maṃ); kāyasya °ma Divy 327.3 ; °mnā LV 155.15 ; Sukh 40.17 ; °mni LV 156.11 ; °ma-, stem in comp. , SP 10.3 ; LV 86.15 ; 101.14 ; Divy 58.22 ; Bhvr. , alpa-sthāma, of little strength , Divy 177.16 ; Av ii.135.4 ; acc. sg. °maṃ, used even in prose of such works as SP , LV , Suv : SP 53.16 ( vs ); 124.1 (yathā-°maṃ, adv. , prose); 380.2—3 (prose, udārarddhibala-°maṃ pratijñāpratibhānabala-°maṃ prajñābala-°maṃ ca dṛṣṭvā); LV 153.3 ; 154.13 ; 264.2 (all prose); 234.7 ( vs ); Mv ii.91.6 ; 131.10 ; 205.1 ; 314.18 ; Suv 65.10 ; 70.7 (both these prose, but v.l. °ma); °mena, instr. , Mv ii.74.12 ; 260.6 ff. and 261.8 ff. (here three sthāma, of body, speech, and thought, which pertain to Bodhisattvas only when they reach enlightenment, not before); -sthāma-tā SP 105.2 .