Indriyasamvara, Indriyasaṃvara, Indriya-samvara: 3 definitions
Introduction:
Indriyasamvara 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
indriyasaṃvara : (nt.) subjugation of senses.
indriyasaṃvara (ဣန္ဒြိယသံဝရ) [(pu) (ပု)]—
[indriya+saṃvara]
[ဣန္ဒြိယ+သံဝရ]
[Pali to Burmese]
indriyasaṃvara—
(Burmese text): ဣန္ဒြေတို့ကို စောင့်စည်းခြင်း၊ စက္ခုစသော ဣန္ဒြေခြောက်ပါး (တံခါးခြောက်ပေါက်) တို့ကို-ပိတ်ထားခြင်း-လုံခြုံစေခြင်း။
(Auto-Translation): Monitoring the individuals, and securing the six entrances of the individuals (six doors) - closing them for safety.

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: Samvara, Indriya.
Starts with: Indriyasamvara-sila, Indriyasamvarabheda, Indriyasamvarapariyanta, Indriyasamvarasamanuggahita, Indriyasamvarasampanna, Indriyasamvarasamvuta, Indriyasamvarasiddhi, Indriyasamvarasukha, Indriyasamvarasutta, Indriyasamvaravipanna, Indriyasamvaravirahita.
Full-text: Indriyasamvarabheda, Indriyasamvaravirahita, Indriyasamvarasiddhi, Indriyasamvarapariyanta, Indriyasamvarasamanuggahita, Indriyasamvarasukha, Indriyasamvarasamvuta, Indriyasamvarasutta, Indriyasamvara-sila, Indriyasamvarasampanna, Indriya Samvara Sila, Samvara Suddhi, Indriyesu Gutta Dvarata, Sukhabhagiya, Pariyanta, Progress Of The Disciple, Tapa, Catuparisuddhisila, Vijja, Shila.
Relevant text
Search found 14 books and stories containing Indriyasamvara, Indriyasaṃvara, Indriya-samvara, Indriya-saṃvara; (plurals include: Indriyasamvaras, Indriyasaṃvaras, samvaras, saṃvaras). You can also click to the full overview containing English textual excerpts. Below are direct links for the most relevant articles:
Buddhist Perspective on the Development of Social Welfare (by Ashin Indacara)
5. The Four Kinds of Morality (Catu-pārisuddhi-Sīla) < [Chapter 5 - The Accomplishment of Virtue and Wisdom]
9. Right or Wrong Livelihood in Buddhist Monastic Order < [Chapter 3 - The Accomplishment of Balanced Livelihood (Sama-jīvitā or Jīvikatā)]
Maha Buddhavamsa—The Great Chronicle of Buddhas (by Ven. Mingun Sayadaw)
Chapter 6 - Reflections On Perfections < [Volume 1.1]
The Story of Elders who fulfilled Pātimokkhasaṃvara-sīla < [Chapter 6 - On Pāramitā]
Part 12 - The Seven Purifications of a Buddha < [Chapter 7 - The Attainment of Buddhahood]
Buddhist Monastic Discipline (by Jotiya Dhirasekera)
Chapter V - Further Aids to Monastic Perfection
Chapter VI - The New Role of Sila in Buddhist Monasticism
Chapter II - Brahmacarya (the quest for emancipation and immortality)
Dhammapada (Illustrated) (by Ven. Weagoda Sarada Maha Thero)
Verse 94 - The Story of Venerable Mahākaccāyana < [Chapter 7 - Arahanta Vagga (The Saints)]
Verse 231-234 - The Story of A Group of Six Monks < [Chapter 17 - Kodha Vagga (Anger)]
How to develop the Excellent Wisdom in Subhasutta (by Phramaha Anuchon Khammee (Sasanakitti))
Part 2.7 - The Nīvaraṇa desertation—Introduction < [Chapter 4 - How to develop the Excellent Wisdom as appeared in Subhasutta]
Part 4.2 - Ariyasamādhikkhandha (the supreme principles of mind concentration) < [Chapter 2 - Studying on the Dhamma content in Subhasutta]
In Asoka’s Footsteps (by Nina Van Gorkom)