Theravada
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+ | '''''Theravāda''''' emerged as one of the [[Hinayana]] (Sanskrit: "Lesser Vehicle") [[Early Buddhist schools|schools]], traditionally numbered at 18, of early Buddhism. | ||
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+ | ==See also== | ||
+ | <!-- Please respect alphabetical order --> | ||
+ | |||
+ | *[[Access to Insight]] | ||
+ | *[[Adhiṭṭhāna]] | ||
+ | *[[Arahant]] | ||
+ | *[[Awgatha]] | ||
+ | *[[Buddha's Dispensation|Buddha Sasana]] | ||
+ | *[[Buddhism in Southeast Asia]] | ||
+ | *[[Buddhist pilgrimage]] | ||
+ | *[[Cetiya]] | ||
+ | *[[Mahanayaka]] | ||
+ | *[[Sacca-kiriya]] | ||
+ | *[[Sambuddhatva jayanthi]] | ||
+ | *[[Sangharaja]] | ||
- | '''Pali''' is a [[Middle Indo-Aryan languages|Middle Indo-Aryan language]] or [[prakrit]] of [[India]]. It is best known as the language of the earliest extant [[Buddhism|Buddhist]] scriptures, as collected in the [[Pali Canon]] or ''Tipitaka'', and as the [[liturgical language]] of [[Theravada|Theravada Buddhism]]. | ||
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Theravāda emerged as one of the Hinayana (Sanskrit: "Lesser Vehicle") schools, traditionally numbered at 18, of early Buddhism.
[edit]
See also
- Access to Insight
- Adhiṭṭhāna
- Arahant
- Awgatha
- Buddha Sasana
- Buddhism in Southeast Asia
- Buddhist pilgrimage
- Cetiya
- Mahanayaka
- Sacca-kiriya
- Sambuddhatva jayanthi
- Sangharaja
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