Jivitukama, Jivitu-kama, Jīvitukāma: 4 definitions
Introduction:
Jivitukama means something in Hinduism, Sanskrit, 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
Sanskrit dictionary
Jīvitukāma (जीवितुकाम):—[=jīvitu-kāma] [from jīv] mfn. = tākāṅkṣin, [GārUp. 1.]
[Sanskrit to German]
Sanskrit, also spelled संस्कृतम् (saṃskṛtam), is an ancient language of India commonly seen as the grandmother of the Indo-European language family (even English!). Closely allied with Prakrit and Pali, Sanskrit is more exhaustive in both grammar and terms and has the most extensive collection of literature in the world, greatly surpassing its sister-languages Greek and Latin.
Pali-English dictionary
jīvitukāma (ဇီဝိတုကာမ) [(ti) (တိ)]—
[jīvituṃ+kāma.thī-nitea jīvitukāmā.]
[ဇီဝိတုံ+ကာမ။ ထီ-၌ ဇီဝိတုကာမာ။]
[Pali to Burmese]
jīvitukāma—
(Burmese text): (၁) အသက်ရှင်ခြင်းငှါ အလိုရှိသော၊ အသက်ရှင်လိုသော၊ သူ။ (၂) အသက်ရှည်ခြင်းငှါ အလိုရှိသော၊ အသက်ရှည်လိုသော၊ သူ။ (၃) အသက်မွေးခြင်းငှါ အလိုရှိသော၊ အသက်မွေးလိုသော၊ သူ။
(Auto-Translation): (1) A person who desires to live, who wishes for life. (2) A person who desires longevity, who wishes for a long life. (3) A person who desires to sustain life, who wishes to make a living.

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: Jivitum, Kama.
Starts with: Jivitukamaka, Jivitukamata, Jivitukamatapadesa.
Full-text: Bhiruka.
Relevant text
Search found 1 books and stories containing Jivitukama, Jivitu-kama, Jīvitu-kāma, Jīvitukāma, Jivitum-kama, Jīvituṃ-kāma; (plurals include: Jivitukamas, kamas, kāmas, Jīvitukāmas). You can also click to the full overview containing English textual excerpts. Below are direct links for the most relevant articles:
Dasarupaka (critical study) (by Anuru Ranjan Mishra)
Part 14 - Society in the Mudrārākṣasa < [Chapter 1 - Nāṭaka (critical study)]