Uṇṇa (neuter) and Uṇṇā (feminine) [Sanskrit ūrṇa and ūrṇā; Latin lāna wool; Gothic wulla; Old High German wolla = English wool; Lithuanian vilna; Cymr. gwlan (= English flannel); Greek λῆνος, also οὖλος = Latin vellus (fleece) = Anglo-Saxon wil-mod] 1. wool A III 37 = IV 265 (+ kappāsā cotton) Ja II 147; Pj II 263 (patt°). 2. hair between the eyebrows Snp 1022, and in stock phrase, describing one of the 32 signs of a Mahāpurisa, bhamukantare jātā uṇṇā odātā etc. D II 18 = III 144 = 170 = Pj II 285. Also at Vism 552 in jāti-uṇṇāya. {116} -ja in uṇṇaja mukha Ja VI 218, meaning "rounded, swelling" (commentary explains by kañcanādāso viya paripuṇṇaṃ mukhaṃ); -nābhi (either uṇṇa° or uṇṇā°, cf. Vedic ūrṇavābhi, ūrṇa + vābhi from Indo-Germanic °ebh to weave as in Latin vespa = wasp, of which shorter root in Sanskrit vā) a spider, literally "wool- i.e. thread-weaver", only in combination with sarabū and mūsikā at Vin II 110 = A II 73 = Ja II 147 (= makkaṭaka commentary).
【中】 uṇṇā,【陰】 羊毛,纖維。(關於佛陀)在眉毛之間的一根毫 毛。~nābhi,【陽】 蜘蛛。