Buddhists do not have a unique language so there is no "Buddhst word" for salvation.
Buddhism is not built on the concept of salvation and the thought would be meaningless.
Hindus believe that all religions, rightly understood, can bring their followers to salvation.
Moksha
Buddhists do not share the concept of "salvation" with Christians. Buddhists have no god(s) that grant prayers, forgive sins, judge, save or condemn. The closest that might be seen as the "salvation" is enlightenment where a Buddhist sees how to run his life with enough skill to avoid desire. The Buddhist can then attain Nirvana, which he may or may not do depending on his choice.
Salvation comes from the Greek word soteria.
Another word for Buddhist temples is "pagodas."
Buddhists don't have salvation for eternity.
The Aramaic word for salvation is "Yeshu'a" (ישוע).
Buddhists do not share the concept of "salvation" with Christians. Buddhists have no god(s) that grant prayers, forgive sins, judge, save or condemn. The closest that might be seen as the "salvation" is enlightenment where a Buddhist sees how to run his life with enough skill to avoid desire. The Buddhist can then attain Nirvana, which he may or may not do, depending on his choice.
The Buddhist word for peace is "Shanti" or "Upasama."
Buddhism ais a philosophy or a religion, not a language. As a consequence there is no "Buddhist" word for sister.
"Buddhist" isn't a language any more than "Episcopalian" is a language. Each Buddhist would have a word in his native language for "Beauty"
The word salvation is a noun, a common, abstract noun. Salvation is a word for the state of being saved, a state of being is a thing, a noun.
To gain salvation, the man went on a crusade.
No, the word salvation is a noun, a common, abstract, uncountable noun; a word for deliverance from sin and its consequences or deliverance from harm, ruin, or loss; redemption, rescue, escape. The word salvation is a word for a thing.