Yogi

Adjective

 * Gurdjieff connects this type of breathing with yogi breathing.
 * It's a yogi trick of some sort.
 * It's a yogi trick of some sort.

Noun

 * 1) Someone, typically a Hindu, who has achieved a high level of spiritual insight, often through the use of yoga

Related terms

 * yogini

Thesaurus
Albigensian, Brahman, Catharist, Franciscan, Ramwat, Sabbatarian, Trappist, Waldensian, abstainer, adept, anchorite, anthroposophist, ascetic, bairagi, bashara, bhikhari, bhikshu, cabalist, dervish, esoteric, fakir, flagellant, guru, hermit, mahatma, mendicant, mystagogue, mystic, pujari, pundit, puritan, purohit, sannyasi, supernaturalist, theosophist, transcendentalist, vairagi, yogin, yogist

Etymology
From Sanskrit yogī, the -in adjective of the verbal root yuj (class 7 present yunakti "to connect"), from a Proto-Indo-European root ''*yug-.

In English from the 17th century in the spellings Ioggue, Ioggui, Jogui. In the 19th century as Yoguee, Yogee, jogee. The spelling yogi is attested as a variant from the 1820s, but coexists with jogi and others until the early 20th century. The spelling yogin is the correct rendition of the uninflected Sanskrit n-stem (while yogī is properly the nominative), and appears in English spelling from the 1840s.

Alternative forms

 * OED records: ioggue, iogue, jogee, jogi, jogue, jougie, joguey, yoguee, yogue, yogee, yogi, yogin.
 * common contemporary spellings are yogi, capitalized Yogi, and yogin.

Noun

 * Armenian:
 * Breton: yogi
 * Czech:
 * French:


 * Hungarian:
 * Russian: йог
 * Turkish:

Noun

 * 1) yogi.