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单词 pali
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Pali


Pa·li

P0023800 (pä′lē)n. A Prakrit language that is a scriptural and liturgical language of Theravada Buddhism.
[Short for Sanskrit pālibhāṣā, language of the row, series of Buddhist sacred texts, from pāliḥ, row, perhaps of Dravidian origin.]

Pali

(ˈpɑːlɪ) n (Languages) an ancient language of India derived from Sanskrit; the language of the Buddhist scriptures[C19: from Sanskrit pāli-bhāsa, from pāli canon + bhāsa language, of Dravidian origin]

Pa•li

(ˈpɑ li)

n. the Prakrit language of the Buddhist scriptures. [1685–95; short for Skt pāli-bhāsa language of the canonical texts =pāli line, row, canon + bhāsa language]
Thesaurus
Noun1.Pali - an ancient Prakrit language (derived from Sanskrit) that is the scriptural and liturgical language of Theravada BuddhismPali - an ancient Prakrit language (derived from Sanskrit) that is the scriptural and liturgical language of Theravada BuddhismPrakrit - any of the vernacular Indic languages of north and central India (as distinguished from Sanskrit) recorded from the 3rd century BC to the 4th century AD
Translations

Pali


Pali

(pä`lē), language belonging to the Indic group of the Indo-Iranian subfamily of the Indo-European family of languages. Some scholars classify it as a PrakritPrakrit
, any of a number of languages belonging to the Indic group of the Indo-Iranian subfamily of the Indo-European family of languages (see Indo-Iranian). The Prakrits are usually classified as Middle Indic languages that followed the Old Indic stage of Sanskrit and Vedic
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, or vernacular dialect of classical SanskritSanskrit
, language belonging to the Indic group of the Indo-Iranian subfamily of the Indo-European family of languages (see Indo-Iranian). Sanskrit was the classical standard language of ancient India, and some of the oldest surviving Indo-European documents are written in
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. Pali, a tongue of the Middle Indic period (see Indo-IranianIndo-Iranian,
subfamily of the Indo-European family of languages, spoken by more than a billion people, chiefly in Afghanistan, Bangladesh, India, Iran, Nepal, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka (see The Indo-European Family of Languages, table).
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 languages) in which the Buddhist scriptures or canon (Tipitaka) were composed, became the main literary language of the Buddhists. As the number of Buddhists in India declined, Pali ceased to be employed in that country. The Buddhists of Sri Lanka, Myanmar, and Thailand, however, still use Pali as a liturgical language.

Bibliography

See W. Geiger, Pali Literature and Language (tr., rev. ed. 1968).

Pali

 

one of the best-known Middle Indic languages of the Indic (Indo-Aryan) group of the Indo-European language family.

Apparently, Pali was originally based on one of the archaic western Middle Indic dialects but later absorbed eastern Indic elements, Magadhi-isms. Pali is native to India but spread to Sri Lanka before the Common Era and to a number of countries east of India in the late first and early second millennia. The form established in Sri Lanka became Buddhist canonical language. Numerous religious, philosophical, scholarly, legal, and fiction works are written in Pali.

Four varieties of Pali are distinguished: the archaic language of the verse portions of the Pali canon, Tipitaka; the more uniform and regular language of canonical prose; the even more simplified and standardized language of commentary literature; and the language of recent literature, with its many new formations, deviations from rules, and foreign influences. Because of the exceptional cultural and historical significance of Pali that distinguishes it from other Middle Indic languages, Pali has been preserved as a living literary language in Sri Lanka, Burma, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam. It is used for religious and scholarly works, and is part of the spoken language of educated Buddhists. Pali has exerted considerable influence on a number of languages in Southeast Asia.

Characteristic of Pali is its system of five vowel phonemes, the absence of syllabic resonants, and the opposition of aspirated and unaspirated and cerebral and noncerebral consonants. The language shows an intolerance for the clustering of most obstruent phonemes, except germinates, and a tendency toward open syllables. The two-syllable law determines whether a syllable is long or short. Pali has a maximum of six cases that are contracted in a number of declensions and a verb system with three tenses and two aspects that interact. It also possesses a well-developed and regular syntactical system and the exceptionally complex semantic structures and vocabulary needed to transmit the ideas of the Tipitaka.

REFERENCES

Minaev, I. P. Ocherk fonetiki i morfologii iazyka pali. St. Petersburg, 1872.
Elizarenkova, T. Ia., and V. N. Toporov. Iazyk pali. Moscow, 1965.
Mayrhofer, M. Handbuch des Pali, vols. 1–2. Heidelberg, 1951.
Perniola, V. A Grammar of the Pali Language. Colombo, 1958.
Warder, A. K. Introduction to Pali. London, 1963.
Rhys Davids, T. W., and W. Stede. The Pali Text Society: Pali-English Dictionary, parts 1–8. London, 1947–59.
Trenckner, V. A Critical Pali Dictonary, vols. 1–2. Copenhagen, 1924—60. (Ongoing publication.)

V. N. TOPOROV

PALI


AcronymDefinition
PALIProfile and Level Indication
PALIPennsylvania Association of Licensed Investigators (est. 1997)
PALIPacific and Asian Linguistics Institute (University of Hawaii; Honolulu, HI)
PALIPolish American Leadership Initiative (Chicago, IL)
PALIPride Alliance of Long Island (New York)
PALIPartido Neoliberal (Spanish: New Liberal Party, Nicaragua)
PALIProcurement Annex Line Item

Pali


  • noun

Words related to Pali

noun an ancient Prakrit language (derived from Sanskrit) that is the scriptural and liturgical language of Theravada Buddhism

Related Words

  • Prakrit
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