Addhuvasila, Addhuvasīla: 3 definitions
Introduction:
Addhuvasila means something in Buddhism, Pali. 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)
Source: Pali Kanon: Pali Proper NamesA youth who stole ornaments to win the daughter of his teacher. He failed in his quest. The story is given in the Silavimamsana Jataka. J.iii.18-20.
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
Source: Sutta: Pali Word Grammar from Pali Myanmar Dictionaryaddhuvasīla (အဒ္ဓုဝသီလ) [(ti) (တိ)]—
[na+dhuvasīla]
[န+ဓုဝသီလ]
[Pali to Burmese]
Source: Sutta: Tipiṭaka Pāḷi-Myanmar Dictionary (တိပိဋက-ပါဠိမြန်မာ အဘိဓာန်)addhuvasīla—
(Burmese text): အမြဲသီလမရှိသော၊ အခါခပ်သိမ်း သီလမစောင့်သော၊ ရံခါသာသီလ စောင့်သော၊ သူ။
(Auto-Translation): Someone who is always without virtue, occasionally does not observe virtue, and only observes virtue sometimes.

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.
See also (Relevant definitions)
Partial matches: Dhuvasila, Na.
Full-text: Silavimamsana Jataka.
Relevant text
No search results for Addhuvasila, Addhuvasīla, Na-dhuvasila, Na-dhuvasīla; (plurals include: Addhuvasilas, Addhuvasīlas, dhuvasilas, dhuvasīlas) in any book or story.