Tikkha: 5 definitions
Introduction:
Tikkha means something in Buddhism, Pali, Jainism, Prakrit. 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 Dictionarytikkha : (adj.) sharp; acute; quick in deciding.
Source: Sutta: The Pali Text Society's Pali-English DictionaryTikkha, (adj.) (=tikhiṇa) sharp, clever, acute, quick (only fig. of the mind), in tikkh-indriya (opp. mud-indriya) Nd2 2353P=Ps. I, 121=II. 195; & tikkha-paññatā A. I, 45. (Page 301)
[Pali to Burmese]
Source: Sutta: Tipiṭaka Pāḷi-Myanmar Dictionary (တိပိဋက-ပါဠိမြန်မာ အဘိဓာန်)tikkha—
(Burmese text): ထက်သော၊ (က) ထက်မြက်-စူးရှ-သော။ တိက္ခတာ-(က)-လည်းကြည့်။ (ခ) လျင်မြန်သော။ တိက္ခပညာ,တိက္ခမာယ-တို့လည်းကြည့်။ (ဂ) အဟုန်ပြင်းသော၊ ရေစီးကြမ်းသော။ (ဃ) အပူရှိန်ပြင်းသော။ တိက္ခဂ္ဂိ,တိက္ခဓာတုက,တိက္ခဘာဝဘာသုရ-တို့ကြည့်။ (င) ရုန့်ရင်းသော။ (စ) ရဲရင့်သော။ တိက္ခဘာဝ-(ဂ)-ကြည့်။ (ဆ) ကြည်လင်သော။ တိက္ခဝိသဒတာ-(ခ)-ကြည့်။ (ဇ) လွန်ကဲသော။ တိက္ခတာ-(ခ)-ကြည့်။ (ဈ) ထက်သန်-အားရှိ-သော။ တိက္ခဘာဝပရိပါလက-(ခ)-လည်းကြည့်။ (ည) ရင့်ကျက်-ခက်မာ-သော။ တိက္ခဘာဝ-(ဃ)-ကြည့်။ (ဋ) ချွန်ထက်သော။ တိက္ခသတ္တိ-ကြည့်။
(Auto-Translation): Superior, (a) meticulous and sharp. Also see the precision - (a). (b) swift. Look into precision skills and precision methodologies. (c) vigorous and forceful. (d) intense in heat. Examine precision chemistry, precision materials, and so on. (e) intense. (f) brave. Look into precision nature - (g). (g) clear. Look at precision details - (c). (h) extraordinary. Check precision - (c). (i) more powerful and capable. Also refer to precision nature - (c). (j) wise and tough. Look at precision nature - (h). (k) outstanding. See precision principles.

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.
Prakrit-English dictionary
Source: DDSA: Paia-sadda-mahannavo; a comprehensive Prakrit Hindi dictionary1) Tikkha (तिक्ख) in the Prakrit language is related to the Sanskrit word: Tīkṣṇa.
2) Tikkha (तिक्ख) also relates to the Sanskrit word: Tīkṣṇa.
Prakrit is an ancient language closely associated with both Pali and Sanskrit. Jain literature is often composed in this language or sub-dialects, such as the Agamas and their commentaries which are written in Ardhamagadhi and Maharashtri Prakrit. The earliest extant texts can be dated to as early as the 4th century BCE although core portions might be older.
See also (Relevant definitions)
Partial matches: Kha, A, Tija.
Starts with (+14): Tikkhabhava, Tikkhabhavabhasura, Tikkhabhavakarana, Tikkhabhavapadana, Tikkhabhavaparihara, Tikkhabhavapariharaka, Tikkhabhavapariharana, Tikkhabhavaparipalaka, Tikkhabhavappatti, Tikkhabuddhi, Tikkhadhatuka, Tikkhadosa, Tikkhagga, Tikkhaggi, Tikkhahasalahupanna, Tikkhala, Tikkhamaya, Tikkhana, Tikkhanana, Tikkhanulomika.
Full-text (+1): Tikkhanana, Tikkhagga, Tikkhasabhava, Tikkhavipassananana, Tikkhadhatuka, Tikkhadosa, Tikkhasalla, Tikkhateja, Tikkhavipassaka, Tikkhapanna, Tikkhamaya, Tikkhabuddhi, Tikkhapavatti, Tikshna, Tikkhindriya, Tikhiṇa, Tejate, Nibbedhaka, Mudu, Javana.
Relevant text
Search found 3 books and stories containing Tikkha, Tija-kha-a; (plurals include: Tikkhas, as). You can also click to the full overview containing English textual excerpts. Below are direct links for the most relevant articles:
A Survey of Paramattha Dhammas (by Sujin Boriharnwanaket)
Chapter 2 - The Stages of Vipassanā < [Part 5 - The Development Of Insight]
Chapter 1 - The Factors Leading To Enlightenment < [Part 5 - The Development Of Insight]
Journal of the European Ayurvedic Society (by Inge Wezler)
Alchemy Scenes in Jain Literature < [Volume 1 (1990)]
In search of underground treasures < [Volume 3 (1993)]
Maha Buddhavamsa—The Great Chronicle of Buddhas (by Ven. Mingun Sayadaw)
Part 8 - Explanations of The Thirty-two Major Marks < [Chapter 1 - The Story of Sataketu Deva, The Future Buddha]