Articles by alphabetic order
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
 Ā Ī Ñ Ś Ū Ö Ō
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0


Difference between revisions of "Four great canonical languages"

From Tibetan Buddhist Encyclopedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page with "{{DisplayImages|1231}} The general belief is that {{Wiki|ancient India}} had 340 different languages. Among them were '''four great canonical languages''' (Ti...")
 
Line 1: Line 1:
 
{{DisplayImages|1231}}
 
{{DisplayImages|1231}}
The [[general]] [[belief]] is that {{Wiki|ancient India}} had 340 different [[languages]]. Among them were '''[[four great canonical languages]]'''  (Tib. {{BigTibetan|[[སྐད་རིགས་ཆེན་པོ་མི་འདྲ་བ་བཞི།]]}}) in the [[sense]] that [[sutra]]s and [[shastra]]s were composed in them: [[Sanskrit]], [[Prākrit]], [[Apabhraṃśa]] and Piśāci. [[Sutras]] and treatises were written in all of these [[languages]]. [[Sanskrit]] is considered the most important among them and is known as the [[divine]] [[language]] (Tib. {{BigTibetan|[[ལྷའི་སྐད།]]}}), the [[language]] that all [[buddha]]s of the three times spoke in the {{Wiki|past}}, are {{Wiki|speaking}} in the {{Wiki|present}} and will speak in the {{Wiki|future}}. The [[Tibetan]] [[translators]] have translated the term [[Sanskrit]] with ‘well composed’ (Tib. {{BigTibetan|[[ལེགས་སྦྱར།]]}}).<ref>{{Nolinking|Khenpo Chöga’s oral explanation, Andreas Kretschmar, Drops of Nectar, Ch.1 p.392.}}</ref>
+
The general [[belief]] is that {{Wiki|ancient India}} had 340 different [[languages]]. Among them were '''[[four great canonical languages]]'''  (Tib. {{BigTibetan|[[སྐད་རིགས་ཆེན་པོ་མི་འདྲ་བ་བཞི།]]}}) in the [[sense]] that [[sutra]]s and [[shastra]]s were composed in them: [[Sanskrit]], [[Prākrit]], [[Apabhraṃśa]] and Piśāci. [[Sutras]] and treatises were written in all of these [[languages]]. [[Sanskrit]] is considered the most important among them and is known as the [[divine]] [[language]] (Tib. {{BigTibetan|[[ལྷའི་སྐད།]]}}), the [[language]] that all [[buddha]]s of the three times spoke in the {{Wiki|past}}, are {{Wiki|speaking}} in the {{Wiki|present}} and will speak in the {{Wiki|future}}. The [[Tibetan]] [[translators]] have translated the term [[Sanskrit]] with ‘well composed’ (Tib. {{BigTibetan|[[ལེགས་སྦྱར།]]}}).<ref>{{Nolinking|Khenpo Chöga’s oral explanation, Andreas Kretschmar, Drops of Nectar, Ch.1 p.392.}}</ref>
  
 
{{reflist}}
 
{{reflist}}

Revision as of 16:37, 20 March 2014

Mutter.jpg

The general belief is that ancient India had 340 different languages. Among them were four great canonical languages (Tib. སྐད་རིགས་ཆེན་པོ་མི་འདྲ་བ་བཞི།) in the sense that sutras and shastras were composed in them: Sanskrit, Prākrit, Apabhraṃśa and Piśāci. Sutras and treatises were written in all of these languages. Sanskrit is considered the most important among them and is known as the divine language (Tib. ལྷའི་སྐད།), the language that all buddhas of the three times spoke in the past, are speaking in the present and will speak in the future. The Tibetan translators have translated the term Sanskrit with ‘well composed’ (Tib. ལེགས་སྦྱར།).[1]

Footnotes

  1. Khenpo Chöga’s oral explanation, Andreas Kretschmar, Drops of Nectar, Ch.1 p.392.

Further Reading

External Links

Source

RigpaWiki:Four great canonical languages