Dharma is a Sanskrit term meaning the moral order of the universe, duty, law, or righteous living. In Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism it refers to the inherent duty or virtue guiding individual conduct. In modern usage, it often signifies one’s ethical path or life purpose, balancing personal duty with cosmic law.
- You might flatten the first vowel into a short /ɑ/ as in ‘cot.’ Keep it tense and longer: /ɑː/. - You may merge syllables producing /ˈdɑːr.mə/ with a quick, indistinct second syllable. Practice with a light pause: /ˈdɑːr.mə/. - The /r/ can be too strong or too silent. Aim for a soft, American-like /ɹ/; UK/AU often have a lighter rhoticity. - Final /ə/ tends to be reduced; treat it as a short schwa rather than an explicit syllable. - Avoid an over-acute mouth position; keep relaxed lips and jaw after the first vowel for natural flow.
- US: rhotic /ɹ/ with clear first syllable; maintain a stronger /ɹ/ before /m/. - UK: often non‑rhotic or softly rhotic; keep the first syllable long but reduce the /ɹ/; final /ə/ tends to be lighter. - AU: similar to US but with more rounded vowels and a slightly flatter /ɹ/; first syllable remains prominent. - IPA references: /ˈdɑːr.mə/ (US/UK/AU varies in rhotic realization and vowel length). - Tips: produce the first syllable with an open jaw, then a quick, smooth transition to /m/ without over-gesturing the /r/; keep the second syllable unstressed and clipped.
"In Hindu philosophy, following your dharma is essential for spiritual progress."
"The monk spoke about living in harmony with dharma rather than mere personal desire."
"Researchers discuss the dharma of communities to support justice and compassion."
"Many traditions teach that neglecting your dharma leads to inner conflict and karmic consequences."
Dharma comes from the Sanskrit dharma, from the root dhṛ– or dhri– meaning 'to hold, maintain, support, bear'. The term originally signified cosmic order or law stabilizing the universe. In the Vedic and post‑Vedic literature, dharma expands to ethical duty within social and personal life, encompassing duties according to age, caste, stage of life, and personal circumstances. Early Buddhist and Jain texts adopt similar notions of virtue and proper conduct, though the term dharma is also used to refer to the teachings of the Buddha (Buddha-dharma) or the religious code of a tradition. In classical Indian philosophy, dharma interacts with artha (prosperity), kama (desire), and moksha (liberation) as a framework for balanced living. In English scholarship, dharma arrived via colonial-era translations and the 19th‑20th century interest in Indian spirituality, gradually broadening to a general sense of ethical path or life purpose. First known English use dates to the 19th century, often in religious or philosophical texts, with modern usage extending into popular discourse on personal duty and spiritual practice.
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💡 These words have similar meanings to "Dharma" and can often be used interchangeably.
🔄 These words have opposite meanings to "Dharma" and show contrast in usage.
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Words that rhyme with "Dharma"
-rma sounds
Practice with these rhyming pairs to improve your pronunciation consistency:
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Pronunciation is DHAR-ma, with primary stress on the first syllable. IPA US/UK/AU: /ˈdɑːr.mə/ or /ˈdɑː.mə/ depending on speaker. Start with the open back unrounded vowel in 'dah' /dɑː/ (tensed, low back), then /r/ as a tapped or approximant, and end with /mə/ as a subdued schwa. Keep the first syllable long and the second unstressed. You’ll want a clean break between syllables rather than a fused /dhar/ cluster. For audio practice, search “Dharma pronunciation” and listen to multiple native sources to match rhythm.
Common errors: (1) Slurring to /ˈdər.mə/ with weak first syllable; ensure a clear /ɑː/ in the first vowel. (2) Mispronouncing r as a rolled sound; use a light American/UK R, not a hard trill. (3) Moving to /ˈdɑːr.mɑː/ or /ˈdɑːr.mə/ with an extra vowel at the end; keep the final schwa /ə/. Corrections: separate syllables, hold /ɑː/ for 0.2–0.3 seconds, and finish with a short /ə/. Practice by saying ‘DAH-rah’ with a crisp but unstressed final /mə/.”},{
In US/UK/AU, the initial vowel is /ɑː/ as in father, with rhotic American /r/ but non-rhotic tendencies in some UK speakers. UK and US often share /ˈdɑː.r.mə/; Australia tends toward /ˈdɑː.mə/ with a shorter middle /r/ realization. Stress remains on the first syllable. The main variation is vowel quality and whether the /r/ is pronounced strongly (US) or weakly (UK/AU). Listen to multiple sources to hear subtle differences in vowel length and rhoticity.
It challenges non‑native speakers due to the long open /ɑː/ in stressed first syllable and the delicate /r/ placement adjacent to a short, unstressed second syllable. The /r/ is often less pronounced in non‑rhotic varieties, and the final /ə/ can be reduced. Additionally, the Sanskrit-based vowel timing may feel longer than expected in English. Focus on keeping the first syllable steady, then soften into /mə/ without adding a vowel.
Yes. The word’s core feature is the syllable boundary and the glide between /r/ and /m/. You’ll notice a subtle tongue tip contact for /ɹ/ or alveolar approximant, followed by a plain /m/ before the schwa. It’s common to blend the middle consonants in rapid speech, but careful enunciation of the /r/ and final /mə/ clarity helps the term feel authentic. Pay attention to the slight length of the first vowel and the clean stop before /r/.
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- Shadowing: listen to 60–90 seconds of native speech (religious talks, Sanskrit‑studies videos) and repeat in real‑time, matching pace and tone. - Minimal pairs: focus on distinguishing /ɑː/ vs /æ/ in similar terms (e.g., 'darm' not common; use non‑existing but logical pairs: 'Dharma' vs 'Dharma‑ma' not ideal). Better pairs focus on rhoticity: 'darma' vs 'dārma' to feel the length; pair with 'dada' to calibrate schwa. - Rhythm practice: practice 1–2 syllable chunks with a slight beat: DHAR-ma, then neutral Between phrases. - Stress practice: maintain primary stress on the first syllable; avoid secondary stress on the second. - Recording: compare your recording with a native speaker; focus on first vowel length and rhotic resonance. - Context practice: two sentences to place the word in religious studies context to fix pronunciation within content.
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