utkzipati
utkṣipati ( Skt. in mg. lifts up , etc. ), ( 1 ) lets up in sense of permits to ascend , opp. nikṣipati : LV 186.(12—)13 f. ekaikasya ca prāsādasya sopānāni pañca-pañca puruṣaśatāny utkṣipanti sma nikṣipanti sma ( let go up and down ); teṣāṃ tathotkṣipyamāṇānāṃ nikṣipyamāṇānāṃ ca śabdo 'rdhayojane śrūyate sma; ( 2 ) (= Pali ukkhipati) suspends (from the order of monks); ppp. utkṣipta: Bhīk 29b.1 utkṣiptānuvartaka (see anuvartaka ); similarly Mvy 8480 utkṣiptānuvṛttiḥ, the following (cleaving to) a suspended (monk), so Tib. spaṅs paḥi … ; ( 3 ) averts (the senses, particularly the eyes, from forbidden objects): Divy 278.29 indriyāṇy utkṣipati, and in the following lines; indriyāṇy utkṣipyāvasthitāḥ MSV iii.18.11 , stood averting their eyes (in embarrassment); in this sense = Pali (indriyāni) okkhipati from avakṣipati, see avakṣipta ; apparently BHS utkṣ° is false Skt. for MIndic okkh°; acc. to Chin. ( eyes not cast to one side ), anutkṣiptacakṣuṣo Prāt 529.10 would belong here; curiously the Pali equivalent, Vin. iv.186.29 okkhittacakkhu (note lack of negative!), appears to mean with downcast eyes , which the old comm. interprets by observing that it is a sin to enter a house or sit down looking around at this or that (tahaṃ tahaṃ olokento), so that okkhitta-, as opposite of this, would mean essentially the same as BHS an-utkṣipta- as interpreted by Chin. But for this evidence, an-utkṣipta-might be interpreted, in accordance with Skt. usage, as not lifted up (thus in another way = okkhitta-).