Actually, the point of engaging in Buddhist practices is not to worship the Buddha. So there are no worshipers of the Buddha. The point of engaging in Buddhist practices is to reduce suffering (dissatisfaction, troubles, sorrow). A practitioner who is successful realizes his or her "Buddha-Nature," which each human is believed already to have (but usually without realizing it). In that sense, the point of engaging in Buddhist practices is to become a buddha, which just means someone who is awake.
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NO
Arguably the most famous Buddhist is the Dalai Lama.
BUDDHA!
He is from Nepal.
No, the collective noun for worshipers in church are a congregation of worshipers, an assembly of worshipers, a gathering of worshipers. The noun 'believers' is a synonym of the noun 'worshipers', which can be substituted for use with the above collective nouns, for example 'a congregation of believers'.
The big Buddha statue is located at the mountaintop Po Lin monastery on Lantau island, fairly close to Hong Kong airport.
It is located in the temple of Wat Traimit.
The Buddah sculpture is located in the Tōdai-jitemple
worshipers of chritianity are called christiansworshipers of chritianity are called christians
There is no standard collective noun for the noun 'believers'. However, there are collective nouns for the synonym 'worshipers', a congregation of worshipers, an assembly of worshipers, a gathering of worshipers. If the 'believers' that you refer to are religious believers, the collective nouns for 'worshipers' will work well; a congregation of believers, an assembly of believers, or a gathering of believers.
there is about 2.1 million christianaty worshipers today
The collective noun is a congregation of worshipers.