English
Etymology
Ultimately borrowed from Sanskrit जाम्बवत् (jāmbavat).
Proper noun
Jambavan (uncountable)
- Name of an immortal sloth-bear (or sometimes a monkey) in Hindu mythology, often stylized as "king of the bears".
- Jāmbavan, Jambavana, Jāmbavana, Jambavat, Jāmbavat, Jambavantha, Jambuwana, Zabaman, Sambuvan
Translations
sloth-bear in Hindu mythology
- Bengali: জাম্ববান (bn) (jamboban)
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 阎波梵 (yánbōfàn), 尚巴望 (shàngbāwàng)
- Gujarati: જાંબુવાન m (jā̃buvān)
- Hindi: जांबवन्त m (jāmbvant), जाम्बवन्त m (jāmbavant), रीछपति m (rīchapti)
- Japanese: ジャンバヴァン (janbavan)
- Kannada: ಜಾಂಬವಂತ (kn) (jāmbavanta)
- Malay: Jambuwana
- Malayalam: ജാംബവാന് (jāmbavānŭ)
- Marathi: जांबुवंत (jāmbuvanta)
- Punjabi: ਜਾਂਵਬੰਧ m (jā̃vbandh)
- Sanskrit: जाम्बवत् (sa) m (jāmbavat), ऋक्षराज (sa) m (ṛkṣarāja)
- Tamil: சாம்பவான் (ta) (cāmpavāṉ)
- Telugu: జాంబవంతుడు (te) (jāmbavantuḍu)
- Thai: ชมพูพาน (champhūphān)
|