karma
karma — noun
1. Within Hindu and Buddhist teachings, the moral energy that a person accumulates
Within Hindu and Buddhist teachings, the moral energy that a person accumulates through their deeds and choices during one lifetime, which shapes the circumstances of the life they enter after death.
Many Buddhists believe that a person's karma in this life shapes their next rebirth.
karma + 'shapes next rebirth' — religious context
Cyrus hoped his years of generous giving would create good karma for his next life.
good karma from virtuous actions
The monk told Élise that karma is a law of cause and effect, not punishment.
Putri's grandmother taught that helping others without expecting anything builds good karma across lifetimes.
Beatrix studied how karma ties present suffering to actions from earlier lives.
文法句型
karma as an uncountable noun
用法筆記
Typically uncountable and used without an article. In religious contexts, karma operates across lifetimes — do not confuse with the everyday sense of 'instant payback' (sense 2).
常見錯誤
2. The idea that a person's past behaviour — good or bad — brings matching results
The idea that a person's past behaviour — good or bad — brings matching results later in their life, as if the world naturally keeps a moral balance.
Andrés laughed after tripping, calling it karma for mocking a friend's earlier fall.
karma as ironic same-day payback
After Lan returned a lost wallet, a stranger bought her coffee — she whispered 'good karma.'
good karma from a kind deed
Obi's phone broke right after he mocked cheap gadgets; his roommate called it instant karma.
Faisal volunteered at the shelter each week, believing good karma would come back to him.
When the cheater failed the exam, the whole class felt that karma had been served.
- retribution
More formal and severe; implies punishment rather than neutral balancing.
- comeuppance
Informal and strongly negative — only for bad outcomes, not good ones.
- what goes around comes around
A full proverb rather than a single noun; carries the same idea of moral balance.
文法句型
karma as an uncountable noun
often preceded by 'good' or 'bad'
用法筆記
Common in informal speech, social media, and pop culture. Unlike sense 1, this sense implies immediate or short-term consequences in the same lifetime — often with an ironic or humorous tone.