puputan
English
Noun
puputan (plural puputans or puputan)
- (now historical) A suicidal march towards an enemy as carried out by the aristocracy or ruling class of a Balinese kingdom.
- 2009, Jeff Lewis, Belinda Lewis, Bali's silent crisis, page 18:
- According to their own records, the Dutch believed that the royal family had determined upon a fight to the death—another puputan—which left them with no alternative but all-out assault.
- 2012, Adrian Vickers, Bali: A Paradise Created, 2nd edition, Tuttle, page 58:
- The puputan was both a sign to other kings of an end, and a way to achieve liberation of the soul by death in battle.
Balinese
Indonesian
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /pu.ˈpʊt.an/
- Rhymes: -an
- Hyphenation: pu‧put‧an
Etymology 1
Affixed puput + -an, from Minangkabau [Term?].
Noun
puputan (plural puputan-puputan, first-person possessive puputanku, second-person possessive puputanmu, third-person possessive puputannya)
- blow
- Synonyms: embusan, tiupan
Etymology 2
Affixed puput + -an, from Balinese ᬧᬸᬧᬸᬢᬦ᭄ (puputan) and Javanese ꦥꦸꦥꦸꦠꦤ꧀ (puputan), from Old Javanese puputan (“end”).
Noun
puputan (plural puputan-puputan, first-person possessive puputanku, second-person possessive puputanmu, third-person possessive puputannya)
- Balinese suicidal fight to the death
- ceremony marking the falling off of the cord
Further reading
- “puputan” in Kamus Besar Bahasa Indonesia, Jakarta: Agency for Language Development and Cultivation – Ministry of Education, Culture, Research, and Technology of the Republic of Indonesia, 2016.
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