a constituent of personality and it also means accumulation in the sense that we constantly accumulate good and bad in our mind
(Sanskrit; Pali, khandha, "group"). The five aggregates that make up human appearance: material composition; sensations; perceptions; mental formations; and consciousness. These are impermanent, constantly changing, and do not constitute a "self." See Buddhist Beliefs About Human Nature.
(Sanskrit) "aggregate," one of the five constituents of the construct called "personality."
the five aggregates, constituting what is generally known as the personality: form sensation perception mental formations conciousness
The five psychophysical constituents that make up a sentient being: form, feeling, discriminative awareness, conditioning (compositional) factors and consciousness.
( Skt. / Tib. phung po): Literally, “aggregate” or “heap." The collection or aggregates that form the notion of "self " are form, feeling, perception, formation and consciousness.
The five skandhas (Sanskrit: सà¥à¤•ानà¥à¤§à¤¾à¤¸) or khandhas (PÄli: खानà¥à¤§à¤¾à¤¸) are the five "aggregates" which categorize or constitute all individual experience according to Buddhist phenomenology. An important corollary in Buddhism is that a "person" is made up of these five aggregates, beyond which there is no "self".