Līḷhā (f.) [abstr. of līḷha, Sk. līḍha, pp. of lih, lit. being polished, cp. ullīḍha polished] grace, ease, charm, adroitness; always used with ref. to the Buddha(Buddhalīḷhā), e. g. J i.155; DhA i.33; iii.79. So in phrase Buddhalīḷhāya dhammaŋ deseti "to expound the doctrine with the Buddha's mastery" J i.152, 155; iii.289; VvA 217 (spelling wrongly līḷāya). Of the B's gait: J i.93, 149; DhA ii.41. The combn with vilāsa, as mentioned by Childers, applies to līlā (q. v.), which may stand for līḷhā at the passages mentioned, although not used of the Buddha.