Dibba: 8 definitions
Introduction:
Dibba means something in Buddhism, Pali, Hindi. If you want to know the exact meaning, history, etymology or English translation of this term then check out the descriptions on this page. Add your comment or reference to a book if you want to contribute to this summary article.
In Buddhism
Theravada (major branch of Buddhism)
: Dhamma Dana: Pali English GlossaryM deva (see this word).
Theravāda is a major branch of Buddhism having the the Pali canon (tipitaka) as their canonical literature, which includes the vinaya-pitaka (monastic rules), the sutta-pitaka (Buddhist sermons) and the abhidhamma-pitaka (philosophy and psychology).
Languages of India and abroad
Pali-English dictionary
: BuddhaSasana: Concise Pali-English Dictionarydibba : (adj.) divine; celestial.
: Sutta: The Pali Text Society's Pali-English DictionaryDibba, (adj.) (Ved. divya=P. divya in verse (q. v.), Gr. dίos (*divios), Lat. dīus (*divios)=divine. Cp. deva) of the next world, divine, heavenly, celestial, superb, magnificent, fit for exalted beings higher than man (devas, heroes, manes etc.), superhuman, opp. mānusaka human. frequent qualifying the foll. “summa bona�: cakkhu the deva-eye, i.e. the faculty of clairvoyance, attr. in a marked degree to the Buddha & other perfect beings (see cakkhumant) D.I, 82, 162; II, 20 (yena suda� samantā yojana� passati divā c’eva rattiñ ca); III, 219; S.I, 196; II, 55 sq.; M.II, 21; It.52; Th.2, 70; Ps.I, 114; II, 175; Vism.434; Sdhp.482; PvA.5 (of Moggallāna); Tikp 278; Dukp 54. sota the d. ear, matching the d. eye D.I, 79, 154; J.V, 456; also as dzٲٳ A.I, 255; M.II, 19; D.III, 38, 281; Vism.430. ū貹 D.I, 153. Ā, ṇṇ etc. (see dasa ṭhānāni) A.I, 115; III, 33; IV, 242; PvA.9, 89. 峾 Sn.361; Dh.187; It.94; also as kāmaguṇ� A.V, 273. Of food, drink, dress & other commodities: A.I, 182; J.I, 50, 202; III, 189; PvA.23, 50, 70, 76 etc. �-� Def. as devaloke sambhūta DA.I, 120; divibhavattā dibba KhA 227; divibhāva� devattabhāva-pariyāpanna PvA.14.—See further e.g. S.I, 105; D.III, 146; Sn.176, 641; Dh.236, 417; Pug.60; Vism.407 (definition), 423.
: Sutta: Pali Word Grammar from Pali Myanmar Dictionary1) dibba (ဒိဗ္�) [(ti) (တ�)]�
ڻ徱+貹ṭi첹
ဒĭėĹ�+ပċĭėĬȶĶı
2) dibba (ဒိဗ္�) [(ti) (တ�)]�
[dibba+sannissita]
ဒĭėĹ�+သĔĹĔĭĿĭĐ]
3) dibba (ဒိဗ္�) [(ti) (တ�)]�
[dibba+a.]
ဒĭėĹ�+အ။
4) dibba (ဒိဗ္�) [(ti) (တ�)]�
[diva+ya=ṇya.divi (dive) bhavo dibbo.sārattha,1.2va3.sī,ṭ�,,2.3.sa�,ṭ�1.41.a�,ṭ�,1.38.pañcikā,4.25.nirutti.459�(,4.25.sya- ) dibba+ṇa.]
[ဒိ�+�=ဏျ။ ဒိဝ� (ဒိဝ�) ဘဝေ� ဒိဗ္ဗော။ သာရတ္ထ၊၁။၂ဝ၃� သီ၊ဋီ၊သစ်၊၂။၃။ သံ၊ဋီ၁။၄၁။ အံ၊ဋီ၊၁။၃၈� ပဉ္စိကာ၊၄။၂၅� နိရုတ္တိ။၄၅၉။ (မောဂ်၊၄။၂၅� သ�-လည်� ကြည့�) ဒိဗ္�+ဏ။]
5) dibba (ဒိဗ္�) [(pu) (ပ�)]�
[divu+ya.rū.51va,646.diva+vasa+a.dive vasantīti dibbā�,ṭ�.11-2.]
[ဒိဝ�+ယ။ ရူ။၅၁ဝ၊၆၄၆။ ဒိ�+ဝ�+အ။ ဒိဝ� ဝသန္တီတ� ဒိဗ္ဗာ။ ဓာန်၊ဋီ။၁၁-၂။]

Pali is the language of the Tipiṭaka, which is the sacred canon of Theravāda Buddhism and contains much of the Buddha’s speech. Closeley related to Sanskrit, both languages are used interchangeably between religions.
Hindi dictionary
: DDSA: A practical Hindi-English dictionaryḌibbā (डिब्बा):�(nm) see [ḍabbā; ~baṃda] canned, tinned; hence ~[ṃdī] (nf).
...
Kannada-English dictionary
: Alar: Kannada-English corpusDibba (ದಿಬ್�):�
1) [noun] a naturally elevated land; a mound.
2) [noun] the raised part of the land on both sides of a river, canal, etc.; a bank.
--- OR ---
Dibba (ದಿಬ್�):—[adjective] = ದಿಬ್� [dibya]1.
--- OR ---
Dibba (ದಿಬ್�):—[noun] = ದಿಬ್� [dibya]2.
Kannada is a Dravidian language (as opposed to the Indo-European language family) mainly spoken in the southwestern region of India.
Nepali dictionary
: unoes: Nepali-English DictionaryḌibbā (डिब्बा):—n. 1. a small flat box or casket; 2. railway compartment;
Nepali is the primary language of the Nepalese people counting almost 20 million native speakers. The country of Nepal is situated in the Himalaya mountain range to the north of India.
See also (Relevant definitions)
Partial matches: Sannissita, Patibahaka, Ya, Diva, A, Tivu, Dibba.
Starts with (+14): Dibba Loka, Dibbabhava, Dibbabhojana, Dibbacakkhu, Dibbacakkhuka, Dibbacandanacunna, Dibbacankama, Dibbacchara, Dibbadhivattha, Dibbagabbha, Dibbagada, Dibbagajakutagarapallankasobhita, Dibbagandha, Dibbagandhabba, Dibbagandhajalacunna, Dibbagandhapuppha, Dibbagandharasa, Dibbagandhavasapupphahattha, Dibbagandhodaka, Dibbakama.
Full-text (+98): Dibbavihara, Dibbati, Dibbacakkhu, Dibbana, Dibbasampatti, Dibbamana, Dibbissama, Dibbacakkhuka, Dibbeyya, Dibbakama, Dibbacandanacunna, Dibbasangita, Dibbapannakara, Dibbapana, Alankatadibbasayana, Dibbattabhava, Dibbayoga, Dibbayuka, Dibbangadasamannagata, Dibbaturiya.
Relevant text
Search found 14 books and stories containing Dibba, Ḍibbā, Dibba-patibahaka, Dibba-paṭibāhaka, Dibba-sannissita, Dibba-a, Diva-ya, Divu-ya; (plurals include: Dibbas, Ḍibbās, patibahakas, paṭibāhakas, sannissitas, as, yas). You can also click to the full overview containing English textual excerpts. Below are direct links for the most relevant articles:
Dhammapada (Illustrated) (by Ven. Weagoda Sarada Maha Thero)
Verse 419-420 - The Story of the Skull-Tapper < [Chapter 26 - Brāhmaṇa Vagga (The Brāhmaṇa)]
Verse 235-238 - The Story of the Son of a Butcher < [Chapter 18 - Mala Vagga (Impurities)]
A Manual of Abhidhamma (by Nārada Thera)
Procedure of Javana < [Chapter IV - Analysis of Thought-Processes]
Yoga-sutras (Ancient and Modern Interpretations) (by Makarand Gopal Newalkar)
Siddhis—Supernormal powers < [Book III - Vibhūti-pāda]
Vinaya Pitaka (3): Khandhaka (by I. B. Horner)
Maha Buddhavamsa—The Great Chronicle of Buddhas (by Ven. Mingun Sayadaw)
Part 2 - Bodhisatta (a future Buddha) < [Chapter 2 - Rare Appearance of a Buddha]
Part 14 - The Ten Powers: Dasabala-ñāṇa < [Chapter 42 - The Dhamma Ratanā]
Part 15 - The Fourteen Buddha Knowledges < [Chapter 42 - The Dhamma Ratanā]
Roman Egypt to peninsular India (patterns of trade) (by Sunil Gupta)
Ancient settlements of Kanara Coast (Karnataka) < [Chapter 4 - Archaeological review of Indo-Roman trade]