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पाली Pali

Also known as: Pāli, Pāḷi

Pali is the canonical language of Theravāda Buddhism, preserving a vast corpus of early Buddhist texts (the Tipiṭaka) along with centuries of commentarial literature. Learning it is a direct route into primary sources used across South and Southeast Asia and in modern Buddhist studies worldwide.

Family: Indo-EuropeanBranch: Indo-IranianPeriod: c. 3rd century BCE → present (canonical, commentarial, and liturgical use)
Region: South Asia (early Buddhist North India; Sri Lanka in early transmission)Region: Southeast Asia (Theravāda liturgical and scholarly tradition)
c. 3rd century BCE → present (canonical, commentarial, and liturgical use)
Approximate modern reference — A broad modern-reference region reflecting the canonical tradition’s South/Southeast Asian transmission; avoid false precision for early speech communities.. Open in OpenStreetMap .

Link legend: links marked “(archived)” open an Internet Archive snapshot because the original site is down or unreliable.

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Typing help

Pali study commonly uses Romanization with diacritics (e.g., ā ī ū ṅ ñ ṭ ḍ ṇ ṃ ḷ), alongside many scripts (Devanagari, Sinhala, Thai, Burmese, Khmer). If you’re typing in Latin script, you’ll want a way to enter macrons and dots.

Scope note

This page is for Pali as a classical/canonical literary language (Tipiṭaka + commentaries and related literature), as used in Theravāda traditions and modern scholarship. Many resources you’ll see are tied to specific editions or transmission lines; prefer well-maintained institutional editions and reference works when possible.

Dictionaries

Grammars & Readers

Texts & Corpora

Study guides

Other resources


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