Cankamana, Caṅkamana, Camkamana: 5 definitions
Introduction:
Cankamana means something in Buddhism, Pali, Jainism, Prakrit. 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.
Languages of India and abroad
Pali-English dictionary
: BuddhaSasana: Concise Pali-English Dictionarycaṅkamana : (nt.) a terraced walk; walking up and down.
: Sutta: The Pali Text Society's Pali-English DictionaryCaṅkamana, (nt.) (fr. caṅkamati) 1. walking up & down S. II, 282; DhA. I, 10.�2. a cloister walk (=caṅkama) VvA. 188. Usually °-: Vin. I, 139 (°sālā); J. III, 85; IV, 329; PvA. 79 (°koṭi the far end of the cloister). (Page 260)
: Sutta: Pali Word Grammar from Pali Myanmar Dictionarycaṅkamana (စင်္ကမ�) [(na) (�)]�
ڰ첹+�(ṅkṇa-�)
[ကမ�+ယု။ (စြင်္ကမ�-သ�)]
[Pali to Burmese]
: Sutta: Tipiṭaka Pāḷi-Myanmar Dictionary (တိပိဋက-ပါဠိမြန်မ� အဘိဓာန�)ṅkԲ�
(Burmese text): (�) သွားခြင်း၊ စြင်္ကံသွားခြင်း၊ လူးလာတုံ့ခေါက်လမ်းလျှောက်ခြင်း။ (�) စြင်္ကံ၊ စြင်္ကံသွားရာအရပ� (စြင်္ကံကျောင်း၊ စြင်္ကံလမ်�)� (�) စြင်္ကံသွားသောအခါ။ စင်္ကမနကာ�,စင်္ကမနဝေလ�-ကြည့်။ (တ�) (�) စြင်္ကံသွားသော၊ လူးလာတုံ့ခေါက� လမ်းလျှောက်သော၊ သူ။ စင်္ကမနကတာပ�-ကြည့်။
(Auto-Translation): (1) Going, wandering, walking down the road nonchalantly. (2) The paths of wandering, the places of wandering (wandering schools, wandering streets). (3) When wandering occurs. The wandering phase, the wandering terrain - look. (4) A person who wanders, who walks down the road nonchalantly. Look at the wandering scenes.

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.
Prakrit-English dictionary
: DDSA: Paia-sadda-mahannavo; a comprehensive Prakrit Hindi dictionaryCaṃkamaṇa (चंकम�) in the Prakrit language is related to the Sanskrit word: 䲹ṅkṇa.
Prakrit is an ancient language closely associated with both Pali and Sanskrit. Jain literature is often composed in this language or sub-dialects, such as the Agamas and their commentaries which are written in Ardhamagadhi and Maharashtri Prakrit. The earliest extant texts can be dated to as early as the 4th century BCE although core portions might be older.
See also (Relevant definitions)
Starts with (+6): Cankamanabhisi, Cankamanabhumibhittiparikamma, Cankamanadayakatthera, Cankamanadhippaya, Cankamanairiyapatha, Cankamanaka, Cankamanakala, Cankamanakaranayuttatthana, Cankamanakatapasa, Cankamanakhanja, Cankamanakilana, Cankamanakiriya, Cankamanakoti, Cankamanamajjha, Cankamananurupatthana, Cankamanaparikkhepavedika, Cankamanapassa, Cankamanasala, Cankamanasattaha, Cankamanasisa.
Full-text (+18): Akkamana, Thanacankamana, Cankamanasala, Cankamanatthana, Cankamanasattaha, Upasankamana, Cankamanattha, Cankamanasisa, Cankamanaviriya, Cankamanavedika, Ratanacankamana, Ukkamana, Anucankamana, Avakkamana, Abhinikkhamana, Patikkamana, Cankamanabhisi, Cankamanakiriya, Cankamanakilana, Cankamanavela.
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Search found 3 books and stories containing Cankamana, Caṅkamana, Camkamana, Caṃkamaṇa, Caṅkamaṇa, Kamu-yu; (plurals include: Cankamanas, Caṅkamanas, Camkamanas, Caṃkamaṇas, Caṅkamaṇas, yus). You can also click to the full overview containing English textual excerpts. Below are direct links for the most relevant articles:
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4.3. Some Architectural Terms < [Chapter 8 - Education, Literature, Sciences, Arts and Architecture]
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