What does the horse on Mount Everest mean?

In Tibetan, "jo-mo glang-ma ri" means "Mother of the Earth". In Tibetan, "Jo-mo" means goddess, and "Langma" should be understood as female elephant (in Tibetan, Langma has two meanings: Yanagi Takayama and female elephant). According to myth, Mount Everest is the palace where tshe-ring mched lnga lived.

Another theory

In Tibetan, Mount Everest ranks third. "Everest" means "Goddess" and "Malone" means "Third". Everest is the third goddess.

It turns out that the name "Everest" comes from twists and turns. The original name of Mount Everest comes from a widely circulated myth in Tibet. According to myth, the five peaks in the Himalayas, headed by Mount Everest, are five sisters, collectively known as the "longevity five fairies". Among them, the longevity immortal (Tibetan "Tashi Tsering Horse") is in charge of the longevity of the world; Hui Zhenxian ("Mi Yue Lausanne Ma" in Tibetan) is in charge of farmland cultivation; The Emerald Fairy (Tibetan "Mother Ting Ge Xie") is in charge of the supernatural power of the "prophet" on earth; Fairy Stone Man ("Degas Zhuosanma" in Tibetan) is in charge of animal husbandry production; The Piping Fairy (Tibetan "Jueban Zhensan Ma") is in charge of human treasures. Among them, Cui Yan Fairy is the main god of Mount Everest, so it was once called "Cui Fei Xue Feng" (Tibetan for "carrying a swallow to stop Jem").

People's understanding of Mount Everest began in the Song Dynasty. According to the Records of Tibet handed down by Tibetan talent Bagongga Dorje, Milarepa, a Tibetan Buddhist and Kagyu monk, practiced in the mountains around Mount Everest for nine years. At that time, there was no name of Mount Everest, and the red history called this area.