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Jataka

American  
[jah-tuh-kuh] / ˈdʒɑ tə kə /

noun

Buddhism.
  1. a collection of fables, many concerning former lives of the Buddha.


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

The venerable Kiribathgoda Gnanananda Thero, founder of the Mahamevnawa Buddhist Monastery in Sri Lanka, told me a story from the Jataka, an ancient book of poems about the Buddha's earlier lives.

From BBC • Jan. 31, 2016

The Ajanta murals tell the Jataka stories of the lives of the Buddha in images of supreme elegance and grace.

From BBC • Apr. 4, 2014

I realised that the greatest short story writer in South Asia was Buddha, where the stories of his previous lives were recounted as Jataka tales.

From The Guardian • May 14, 2013

There is a brief abstract of the Jataka in Prof. Estlin Carpenter's sermon, Three Ways of Salvation, 1884, p.

From Indian Fairy Tales by Jacobs, Joseph

No fear has any one of me; neither have I fear of any one: in my good-will to all I trust.—Introduction to the Jataka.

From The Essence of Buddhism by Various