| WORD | MEANING |
| Eka: | One; unitary |
| Eka-ksetravagaha: | Occupying the same locus |
| Eka-phalaka: | Probably identical to eka-sataka |
| Eka-sataka: | A mendicant who wears a single piece of cloth |
| Ekanta: | One-sided |
| Taking only one aspect of a many-sided thing e.g., man is mortal and immortal, regarded from the point of view of body and soul respectively. | |
| Taking only one view. | |
| Ekanta-nitya: | Absolutely eternal |
| Ekantavada: | Extremism; absolutist doctrine |
| Ekantavadin: | One who holds an absolutist doctrine |
| Ekartha-samavayin: | Co-inherent in the same substratum |
| Ekatva: | Unity |
| Ekatva anupreksha: | Loneliness, I am alone the doer ofmy actinos and the enjoyer of the fruits of them. |
| Ekatvajnana: | Knowledge of oneness |
| Ekendriya: | A being with only one (namely, the tactile) sense faculty; a synonym for sthavara beings |
| One-sensed creature | |
| Ennui: | dissatisfaction. |
| Esana-samiti: | Care in accepting alms |
| Eva: | In fact; an important term in the formula of the sapta-bhangi-naya |
| Evambhuta (Naya): | The such-like |
| Evambhutabhasa: | False such-like view point |