Pa > References for ‘passenger’
See also: passage · passages · passageway · passangers · passed · passengerlike · passengers · passer-by · passerby · passers-by
[5] In this metaphor the entire body is compared to a chariot: the passenger of this body-like chariot is the [...] of other vehicles this Soul-like passenger also does not have to do anything; [...] a wine shop and accordingly the passenger, as the witness will derive the [...] the judgement-like charioteer.
[10] As I already said, the passenger of this body-like chariot is the [...] the conscience, and the supreme passenger of that chariot is Ráma [...] easily to the desireless path.
[13] In Brahma, the Supreme Consciousness, [...] mind, the soul or Átman(the passenger of this body-like chariot) regards [...] before it. Thus the Sage has said.
[28] They proceeded to the city centre. [...] Muzaffarpur. Perhaps I will be the only passenger in this compartment.”
[68] No sooner had I finished reading [...] passengers died in the crash. From the passenger list provided at the airport it [...] Calcutta, a Sri Arúpratan Mitra.
[21] Akliśt́ákliśt́avrtti [...] the First Class compartment. But passenger D is travelling second class, and the train is overcrowded and painfully cramped. So for passenger D the train journey is certainly [...] humiliation, bound in chains. But as passenger D was travelling with a bonafide [...] beings, but not Parama Paruśa.
[14] If the human body is compared to a chariot, then the passenger is the Átma, unit consciousness, [...] been successful in all respects.
[1] Todays subject of discourse [...] pole star before their eyes, the passenger on the path of liberation from [...] – the way towards the Absolute.
[22] I say that below the level of human [...] with the cart and along with the passenger. [laughter] It is so wild in its [...] recently it was a wild animal.
[79] “One time, I was going to [...] agree with me much so I got into a passenger compartment, a first class compartment.
[81] “The second difference I [...] to see the ticket of a certain passenger. He showed me a third class ticket. [...] It cannot be put up with.’
[88] “One smart passenger said: ‘I dont know [...] where they were living.’
[97] “The ten oclock train [...] the nine oclock train is a passenger train. It takes at least five [...] ten oclock train.”
[98] They proceeded to the city centre. [...] Muzaffarpur. Perhaps I will be the only passenger in this compartment.”
[138] No sooner had I finished reading [...] passengers died in the crash. From the passenger list provided at the airport it [...] Calcutta, a Sri Arúpratan Mitra.
[76] The railway employee told me: “A few days ago a passenger by the name of Madhumalay Mitra [...] about 2:30 in the morning.”