Dhuvam, Dhuvaṃ, Dhuvāṃ, Dhūvāṃ: 4 definitions
Introduction:
Dhuvam 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
Source: BuddhaSasana: Concise Pali-English Dictionarydhuvaṃ : (adv.) regularly; constantly.
Source: Sutta: Pali Word Grammar from Pali Myanmar Dictionarydhuvaṃ (ဓုဝံ) [(bya) (ဗျ)]—
[dhuvaṃ iti thirekaṃsatthesu.nīti,sutta.388.dhuvaṃ thirāvadhāraṇe..1159.thire avadhāraṇe ca.ṭī.dhuvaṃ thirāvadhāraṇesu.rū.nhā-136.amara.23.21va.thoma.cintāmaṇi.kotthubha..(ç dhuva-saṃ,dhuva-prā,sī.dhuvaṃaddhamāgadhī)]
[ဓုဝံ ဣတိ ထိရေကံသတ္ထေသု။ နီတိ၊ သုတ္တ။၃၈၈။ ဓုဝံ ထိရာဝဓာရဏေ။ ဓာန်။ ၁၁၅၉။ ထိရေ အဝဓာရဏေ စ။ ယင်းဋီ။ ဓုဝံ ထိရာဝဓာရဏေသု။ရူ။နှာ-၁၃၆။ အမရ။ ၂၃။၂၁ဝ။ ထောမ။ စိန္တာမဏိ။ ကောတ္ထုဘ။ တို့လည်းကြည့်။ (ဝုမ်,ဓုဝ-သံ၊ ဓုဝ-ပြာ၊ သီဟိုဠ်။ ဓုဝံအဒ္ဓမာဂဓီ)]

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.
Nepali dictionary
Source: unoes: Nepali-English Dictionary1) Dhuvāṃ (धुवां):—[=धुवाँ] n. → धूवाँ [dhūvāṃ]
2) Dhūvāṃ (धूवां):—[=धूवाँ] n. smoke; fume;
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)
Starts with: Dhuvamaggatthana, Dhuvamdhara, Dhuvami, Dhuvamkasa, Dhuvamla, Dhuvamlo, Dhuvamsucaka-yantra, Dhuvamunu, Tuvam.
Full-text: Tuvan, Tuvam, Manuttuvam, Carva-cattimattuvam, Carvattumakattuvam, Cetittuvam, Cetanattuvam, Atirushta-paratantiratuvam, Tat-tuvamaci, Dhuva, Thiti, Nibbana Sutta, Nibbana.
Relevant text
Search found 6 books and stories containing Dhuvam, Dhuvaṃ, Dhuvāṃ, Dhūvāṃ; (plurals include: Dhuvams, Dhuvaṃs, Dhuvāṃs, Dhūvāṃs). 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 147 - The Story of Sirimā < [Chapter 11 - Jarā Vagga (Old Age)]
A Descriptive Catalogue of the Sanskrit Manuscripts, Madras (by M. Seshagiri Sastri)
Page 286 < [Volume 6 (1909)]
Gemstones of the Good Dhamma (by Ven. S. Dhammika)
Maha Buddhavamsa—The Great Chronicle of Buddhas (by Ven. Mingun Sayadaw)
Part 1 - Story of Sirimā the Courtesan < [Chapter 34a - The Buddha’s Seventeenth Vassa at Veḷuvana]
Apadana commentary (Atthakatha) (by U Lu Pe Win)
Commentary on the biography of the the thera Sāriputta < [Chapter 1 - Buddhavagga (Buddha section)]
Journal of the European Ayurvedic Society (by Inge Wezler)
In search of underground treasures < [Volume 3 (1993)]