释义 |
nounPlural palis ˈpɑːliːˈpälē (in Hawaii) a cliff. (夏威夷的)悬崖,绝壁 Example sentencesExamples - Breakouts persist from the Kamoamoa tube system and feed surface flows above and on the pali.
- The fluted sea cliffs, or pali, rise like sentries straight up from the green valleys and white sand beaches below.
- This is a closeup pali, and behind that are some faraway ones covered in clouds, and on the bottom there are some people walking into my picture.
noun ˈpɑːliːˈpälē mass nounAn Indic language, closely related to Sanskrit, in which the sacred texts of Theravada Buddhism are written. Pali developed in northern India in the 5th–2nd centuries BC. Example sentencesExamples - In fact, Sanskrit and Pali have a larger literature in defence of atheism, agnosticism and theological scepticism than exists in any other classical language.
- They were taught religion and the religious language of Pali by Buddhist monks.
- As subsidiaries, we have Punjabi, Pali, Sanskrit, Tamil and Bengali.
- Theravada Buddhism is based on the tripitaka, original teachings of the Buddha, written in Pali.
- Some scholars claim that Pali was the language spoken in the Ujjain region which the Buddha is not recorded as having visited.
- They deliberately used Pali, the language of the common folk for their discourses, not Sanskrit.
- As in Thailand, Laos, and Burma, the language of Theravada Buddhist scriptures, Pali, often is studied by young men during temporary periods as monks and is an important influence on literary Khmer.
- Because Modern Indian history does not entail mastering Persian / Urdu or Sanskrit / Pali, the number of world-class historians in this field is considerable and growing.
- It has been influenced by Pali, the sacred language of southern Buddhism.
- When it comes to translating, sometimes a key word is not translatable into meaningful English, and in such cases I have left it in its original Sanskrit or Pali.
- He preached in Pali, the language of the common people.
- Our texts use Sanskrit, Pali and Tamil, but we do not know Tamil.
- There he studied the Buddhist religion and learned to read and write Pali as well as Chinese and English
- He translates all the Dhamma and chanting from Sanskrit and Pali into Thai also.
adjective ˈpɑːliːˈpälē Relating to Pali. Example sentencesExamples - But the literature, Pali and Sanskrit, Buddhist and Brahmanical, shows that non-monarchical forms of government were omnipresent.
- Buddhists themselves refer to the teaching by the Pali term Dhamma (or in some schools of Buddhism by its Sanskrit equivalent dharma).
- This was a fine speech given as a spontaneous response to the issue that was raised during a talk given by a Pali scholar visiting Burma in the 1950's.
- What is more, the greatest loss has been inflicted on them by looting their libraries, which contained the treasures of Sanskrit, Pali and Farsi manuscripts.
- The Vinaya, the compendium of monks' rules in the Pali canon, lists five ‘Reflections before Admonishing.’
OriginFrom Pali pāli(-bhāsā) 'canonical texts'. RhymesBali, barley, Cali, Carly, Charlie, Dali, Diwali, finale, gnarly, Gurkhali, Kali, Kigali, Mali, Marley, marly, parley, snarly, Somali, Svengali, tamale nounˈpälē (in Hawaii) a cliff. (夏威夷的)悬崖,绝壁 Example sentencesExamples - The fluted sea cliffs, or pali, rise like sentries straight up from the green valleys and white sand beaches below.
- Breakouts persist from the Kamoamoa tube system and feed surface flows above and on the pali.
- This is a closeup pali, and behind that are some faraway ones covered in clouds, and on the bottom there are some people walking into my picture.
nounˈpälē An Indic language, closely related to Sanskrit, in which the sacred texts of Theravada Buddhism are written. Pali developed in northern India in the 5th–2nd centuries BC. Example sentencesExamples - They were taught religion and the religious language of Pali by Buddhist monks.
- When it comes to translating, sometimes a key word is not translatable into meaningful English, and in such cases I have left it in its original Sanskrit or Pali.
- As in Thailand, Laos, and Burma, the language of Theravada Buddhist scriptures, Pali, often is studied by young men during temporary periods as monks and is an important influence on literary Khmer.
- They deliberately used Pali, the language of the common folk for their discourses, not Sanskrit.
- It has been influenced by Pali, the sacred language of southern Buddhism.
- Theravada Buddhism is based on the tripitaka, original teachings of the Buddha, written in Pali.
- There he studied the Buddhist religion and learned to read and write Pali as well as Chinese and English
- Our texts use Sanskrit, Pali and Tamil, but we do not know Tamil.
- He translates all the Dhamma and chanting from Sanskrit and Pali into Thai also.
- In fact, Sanskrit and Pali have a larger literature in defence of atheism, agnosticism and theological scepticism than exists in any other classical language.
- Some scholars claim that Pali was the language spoken in the Ujjain region which the Buddha is not recorded as having visited.
- As subsidiaries, we have Punjabi, Pali, Sanskrit, Tamil and Bengali.
- He preached in Pali, the language of the common people.
- Because Modern Indian history does not entail mastering Persian / Urdu or Sanskrit / Pali, the number of world-class historians in this field is considerable and growing.
adjectiveˈpälē Relating to Pali. Example sentencesExamples - This was a fine speech given as a spontaneous response to the issue that was raised during a talk given by a Pali scholar visiting Burma in the 1950's.
- Buddhists themselves refer to the teaching by the Pali term Dhamma (or in some schools of Buddhism by its Sanskrit equivalent dharma).
- What is more, the greatest loss has been inflicted on them by looting their libraries, which contained the treasures of Sanskrit, Pali and Farsi manuscripts.
- The Vinaya, the compendium of monks' rules in the Pali canon, lists five ‘Reflections before Admonishing.’
- But the literature, Pali and Sanskrit, Buddhist and Brahmanical, shows that non-monarchical forms of government were omnipresent.
OriginFrom Pali pāli(-bhāsā) ‘canonical texts’. |