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Pali

Pali is an ancient Middle Indo-Aryan language that serves as the liturgical and textual language of Theravada Buddhism. It is the language of the Pali Canon, or Tipitaka, the principal scriptures of Theravāda, traditionally divided into three baskets: Vinaya Pitaka, Sutta Pitaka, and Abhidhamma Pitaka. The canonical texts have been preserved and studied for centuries in Buddhist communities across South and Southeast Asia.

Pali developed from dialects associated with the Magadhi Prakrit spoken in eastern India during the late first

Linguistically, Pali features a Middle Indo-Aryan grammar with noun inflection, verb conjugation, case endings, and postpositions,

Script and transmission have varied by region. Historically, Pali texts were transmitted orally and later written

Today, Pali remains the core liturgical language of Theravada Buddhism and a key subject of academic study.

millennium
BCE.
The
Theravāda
canon
was
likely
composed
in
that
milieu
and
later
standardized,
especially
in
Sri
Lanka,
where
it
was
first
committed
to
writing
in
the
first
millennium
BCE
to
CE.
The
language
is
closely
related
to
other
Prakrits
and
to
Magadhi.
forming
a
relatively
analytic
syntax.
Its
lexicon
incorporates
many
Sanskrit
loanwords
but
with
distinct
sound
shifts
and
local
usage.
Scholarly
Pali
is
typically
presented
in
a
standard
literary
form
with
diacritics
in
academic
sources.
in
scripts
such
as
Sinhala
and
Devanagari,
among
others.
In
modern
scholarship
and
practice,
Pali
is
published
in
multiple
scripts
and
in
Latin
transliteration
to
facilitate
study
and
international
access.
It
is
taught
in
monasteries
and
universities
worldwide,
enabling
access
to
early
Buddhist
doctrine
and
historical
texts.