+~
+ "Emptiness" is a rough translation of the Sanskrit term shunyata and the
+Tibetan term tongpa-nyi. The basic meaning of the Sanskrit word shunya is
+"zero," while the Tibetan word tongpa means "empty"—not in the sense
+of a vacuum or a void, but rather in the sense that the basis of experience is
+beyond our ability to perceive with our senses and or to capture in a nice,
+tidy concept. Maybe a better understanding of the deep sense of the word may
+be "inconceivable" or "unnameable."
+ So when Buddhists talk about emptiness as the basis of our being, we don’t
+mean that who or what we are is nothing, a zero, a point of view that can give
+way to a kind of cynicism. The actual teachings on emptiness imply an
+infinitely open space that allows for anything to appear, change, disappear,
+and reappear. The basic meaning of emptiness, in other words, is openness, or
+potential. At the basic level of our being, we are "empty" of definable
+characteristics.
+ -- Tsoknyi Rinpoche, from "The Best Buddhist Writing 2013", published by
+ Shambhala Publications and Snow Lion Publications.