Avatthuka, Avatthu-ka: 2 definitions
Introduction:
Avatthuka 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.
Languages of India and abroad
Pali-English dictionary
avatthuka (အဝတ္ထုက) [(ti) (တိ)]—
[avatthu+ka]
[အဝတ္ထု+က]
[Pali to Burmese]
avatthuka—
(Burmese text): (၁) (က) (ကြံဖတ်-ဟူသော) မှီရာဝတ္ထု-အထည်ဒြဗ်-မရှိသော။ (ခ) မှီရာဝတ္ထုရုပ်မရှိသော။ (ဂ) ထည့်သွင်းတည်ထားအပ်သော ဓာတ်တော်စသော)ဝတ္ထုဒြဗ်မရှိသော။ (၂) (က) ဇာတ်စသော အကြောင်း-မရှိ-ကင်းသော။ (ခ) လုံလောက်သော အကြောင်းမရှိသော။
(Auto-Translation): (1) (a) There is no supporting object - material that is not substantial. (b) There is no form of the supporting object. (c) There is no object that is fundamentally established (such as the essence). (2) (a) There is no cause that is essential (of the story). (b) There is no sufficient cause.

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)
Starts with: Avatthukapakka, Avatthukappatiggahita, Avatthukara, Avatthukata, Avatthukatilatela, Avatthukavacana.
Full-text: Avatthukata, Avatthukappatiggahita, Avatthukavacana, Niyatavatthuka, Avatthu, Avatthukatilatela, Avatthukapakka.
Relevant text
Search found 1 books and stories containing Avatthuka, Avatthu-ka; (plurals include: Avatthukas, kas). You can also click to the full overview containing English textual excerpts. Below are direct links for the most relevant articles:
A Manual of Abhidhamma (by Nārada Thera)
Summary of Bases < [Chapter III - Miscellaneous Section]