Tato, Ta-to, Ṭāṭo, Tāto: 7 definitions
Introduction:
Tato means something in Hinduism, Sanskrit, Buddhism, Pali, the history of ancient India. 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.
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India history and geography
Tato (in the Parbatiya language) translates to “Hot” (in English); as mentioned in the appendix of the translation of the Vanshavali or Bansawali (“history and genealogical accounts of Nepal”). The Parbatiya word ‘Tato’ is known in the Newari language as Kwaka.

The history of India traces the identification of countries, villages, towns and other regions of India, as well as mythology, zoology, royal dynasties, rulers, tribes, local festivities and traditions and regional languages. Ancient India enjoyed religious freedom and encourages the path of Dharma, a concept common to Buddhism, Hinduism, and Jainism.
Languages of India and abroad
Pali-English dictionary
tato : (ind.) from there; from that; thence; therefore; thereupon.
Tato, (Abl. of pron. base ta° (see ta° II. 4)) 1. from this, in this S. III, 96 (tatoja); J. III, 281 (tato paraṃ beyond this, after this); Nd2 664 (id.); DA. I, 212 (tatonidāna). ‹-› 2. thence J. I, 278; Miln. 47.—3. thereupon, further, afterwards J. I, 58; Dh. 42; Miln. 48; PvA. 21, etc. (Page 295)
1) tato (တတော) [(bya) (ဗျ)]—
[ta+to.(ka 248.rū.26va.nīti,sutta.493.,4.95-8-).to-saddo tra-tha-saddā-dayo viya ekatthabahvatthesu vattanti.,ṭīkā,ni,pe.(taç ta-saṃ)]
[တ+တော။ (ကစ္စည်း ၂၄၈။ ရူ။ ၂၆ဝ။ နီတိ၊ သုတ္တ။ ၄၉၃။ မောဂ်၊ ၄။ ၉၅-၈-တို့ကြည့်)။ တော-သဒ္ဒေါ တြ-ထ-သဒ္ဒါ-ဒယော ဝိယ ဧကတ္ထဗဟွတ္ထေသု ဝတ္တန္တိ။ ဇာတ်၊ ဋီကာ၊ နိဒါန်း၊ ပေ။ (တတသ်,တတး-သံ)]
2) tato (တတော) [(bya) (ဗျ)]—
(ka) ruṃmyha=padapūraṇamatta.(kha) a-amarhiso kāla-nitea.
(က) ပုဒ်ပြည့်ရုံမျှ=ပဒပူရဏမတ္တ။ (ခ) အခြားမဲ့-အခြားမရှိသော ကာလ-၌။
[Pali to Burmese]
1) tato—
(Burmese text):
(က) ပုဒ်ပြည့်ရုံမျှ=ပဒပူရဏမတ္တ။ (ခ) အခြားမဲ့-အခြားမရှိသော ကာလ-၌။
(Auto-Translation): (a) Only at full moon = Padapurana Mitta. (b) Other than - During a time when there is no other.
2) tato—
(Burmese text): (၁) ထို...သည်...တို့သည်=လိင်္ဂတ္ထ။ (၂) ထို...သည်...တို့သည်=ကတွတ္ထ။ (၃) ထို...ဖြင့်...တို့ဖြင့်=ကရဏတ္ထ။ (၄) ထို...အားဖြင့်=တတိယာဝိသေသနတ္ထ။ (၅) ထို...ကြောင့်...ထို့ကြောင့်=ဟေတွတ္ထ။ (၆) (က) ထို...မှ...တို့မှ=နိဿက္ကတ္ထ။ (ခ) ထို...အောက်...တို့အောက်=နိဿက္ကတ္ထ။ (ဂ) ထို...ထက်...တို့ထက်=နိဿက္ကတ္ထ။ (၇) ထို...၏ တို့၏=သာမျတ္ထ။ (၈) ထို...၌...တို့၌=ဘုမ္မတ္ထ။ (၉) ထို...တွင်...တို့တွင်=နိဒ္ဓါရဏတ္ထ။
(Auto-Translation): (1) That... are... = Masculine form. (2) That... are... = Feminine form. (3) That... by... = Causal form. (4) That... because of = Third person narrative form. (5) That... due to... therefore = Conjunction form. (6) (a) That... from... = Negative form. (b) That... under... = Negative form. (c) That... than... = Negative form. (7) That... of... = Honorific form. (8) That... in... = Superlative form. (9) That... at... = Instrumental form.

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.
Sanskrit dictionary
Tato (ततो):—[from ta-tama] in [compound] for tas.
Tato (in Sanskrit) can be associated with the following Chinese terms:
1) 復更 [fù gèng]: “further”.
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.
Nepali dictionary
1) Ṭāṭo (टाटो):—n. 1. mark; spot; 2. scar; stain; 3. burnt bread; 4. land; plot of land;
2) Ṭāṭo (टाटो):—n. 1. mark; spot; 2. scar; stain; 3. burnt bread; 4. land; plot of land;
3) Tāto (तातो):—n. 1. heat; 2. enthusiasm/eagerness to work;
4) Tāto (तातो):—adj. 1. hot; 2. warm;
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)
Partial matches (+0): Luo, Da, To, Ta.
Starts with (+7): Ta tou, Tato-lagnu, Tato-nidanam, Tato-nimittam, Tato-pani, Tato-ragat, Tato-ragata, Tato-ris, Tato-risa, Tatoba, Tatobhavant, Tatobhavat, Tatobrihatika, Tatocharo, Tatochhaaro, Tatoja, Tatojasi, Tatola, Tatolana, Tatomukha.
Full-text (+526): Tatonidana, Rato-tato, Tato-ragata, Tato-risa, Tato-lagnu, Tato-pani, Datha, Tato-ragat, Tato-ris, Itotato, Tato-nidanam, Tato-nimittam, Pabhuti, Tatobrihatika, Kolahala, Camunda, Mai tato, Ito-bhrashtah-tato-bhrashtah, Tatobhavat, Nirvacana.
Relevant text
Search found 303 books and stories containing Tato, Ta-to, Ṭāṭo, Tāto; (plurals include: Tatos, tos, Ṭāṭos, Tātos). You can also click to the full overview containing English textual excerpts. Below are direct links for the most relevant articles:
Brihad Bhagavatamrita (commentary) (by Śrī Śrīmad Bhaktivedānta Nārāyana Gosvāmī Mahārāja)
Verse 1.4.97 < [Chapter 4 - Bhakta (the devotee)]
Verse 2.4.8 < [Chapter 4 - Vaikuṇṭha (the spiritual world)]
Verse 2.1.12 < [Chapter 1 - Vairāgya (renunciation)]
Jivanandana of Anandaraya Makhin (Study) (by G. D. Jayalakshmi)
Life of Ānandarāya Makhin < [Chapter 2 - Author, His Life and Works]
Analysis of Vidūṣaka < [Chapter 6 - Dramatic aspects of the Jīvanandana Nāṭaka]
Markandeya Purana (Study) (by Chandamita Bhattacharya)
Rules and restrictions of Śrāddha < [Chapter 3]
4. Birth of Kālī from Ambikā’s Forehead < [Chapter 3]
Intercaste Marriage < [Chapter 2]
Mahavastu (great story) (by J. J. Jones)
Chapter XXVI - Jātaka of the Bird (Śakuntaka) (2) < [Volume II]
Chapter II-a - Sermon on the Hells (naraka) < [Volume I]
Chapter IV - Mañjarī-jātaka < [Volume II]
Notices of Sanskrit Manuscripts (by Rajendralala Mitra)
Yogatattva Upanishad (translation and study) (by Sujata Jena)


