Skip to main content Accessibility help

Login Alert

×

Menu links

  1. Browse
      1. Subjects
          1. Subjects (A-D)
            1. Anthropology
            2. Archaeology
            3. Area Studies
            4. Art
            5. Chemistry
            6. Classical Studies
            7. Computer Science
            8. Drama, Theatre, Performance Studies
          2. Subjects (E-K)
            1. Earth and Environmental Science
            2. Economics
            3. Education
            4. Engineering
            5. English Language Teaching – Resources for Teachers
            6. Film, Media, Mass Communication
            7. General Science
            8. Geography
            9. History
          3. Subjects (L-O)
            1. Language and Linguistics
            2. Law
            3. Life Sciences
            4. Literature
            5. Management
            6. Materials Science
            7. Mathematics
            8. Medicine
            9. Music
            10. Nutrition
          4. Subjects (P-Z)
            1. Philosophy
            2. Physics and Astronomy
            3. Politics and International Relations
            4. Psychiatry
            5. Psychology
            6. Religion
            7. Social Science Research Methods
            8. Sociology
            9. Statistics and Probability
        1. Open access
            1. All open access publishing
              1. Open access
              2. Open access journals
              3. Research open journals
              4. Journals containing open access
              5. Open access articles
              6. Open access books
              7. Open access Elements
          1. Journals
              1. Explore
                1. All journal subjects
                2. Search journals
              2. Open access
                1. Open access journals
                2. Research open journals
                3. Journals containing open access
                4. Open access articles
              3. Collections
                1. Cambridge Forum
                2. Cambridge Law Reports Collection
                3. Cambridge Prisms
                4. Research Directions
            1. Books
                1. Explore
                  1. Books
                  2. Open access books
                  3. New books
                  4. Flip it Open
                2. Collections
                  1. Cambridge Companions
                  2. Cambridge Editions
                  3. Cambridge Histories
                  4. Cambridge Library Collection
                  5. Cambridge Shakespeare
                  6. Cambridge Handbooks
                3. Collections (cont.)
                  1. Dispute Settlement Reports Online
                  2. Flip it Open
                  3. Hemingway Letters
                  4. Shakespeare Survey
                  5. Stahl Online
                  6. The Correspondence of Isaac Newton
              1. Elements
                  1. Explore
                    1. About Elements
                    2. Elements series
                    3. Open access Elements
                    4. New Elements
                  2. Subjects (A-E)
                    1. Anthropology
                    2. Archaeology
                    3. Classical Studies
                    4. Computer Science
                    5. Drama, Theatre, Performance Studies
                    6. Earth and Environmental Sciences
                    7. Economics
                    8. Education
                    9. Engineering
                  3. Subjects (F-O)
                    1. Film, Media, Mass Communication
                    2. History
                    3. Language and Linguistics
                    4. Law
                    5. Life Sciences
                    6. Literature
                    7. Management
                    8. Mathematics
                    9. Medicine
                    10. Music
                  4. Subjects (P-Z)
                    1. Philosophy
                    2. Physics and Astronomy
                    3. Politics and International Relations
                    4. Psychology
                    5. Religion
                    6. Sociology
                    7. Statistics and Probability
                1. Textbooks
                    1. Explore
                      1. Cambridge Higher Education
                      2. Title list
                      3. New titles
                  1. Collections
                      1. Book collections
                        1. Cambridge Companions
                        2. Cambridge Editions
                        3. Cambridge Histories
                        4. Cambridge Library Collection
                        5. Cambridge Shakespeare
                        6. Cambridge Handbooks
                      2. Book collections (cont.)
                        1. Dispute Settlement Reports Online
                        2. Flip it Open
                        3. Hemingway Letters
                        4. Shakespeare Survey
                        5. Stahl Online
                        6. The Correspondence of Isaac Newton
                      3. Journal collections
                        1. Cambridge Forum
                        2. Cambridge Law Reports Collection
                        3. Cambridge Materials
                        4. Cambridge Prisms
                      4. Series
                        1. All series
                    1. Partners
                        1. Partners
                          1. Agenda Publishing
                          2. Amsterdam University Press
                          3. Anthem Press
                          4. Boydell & Brewer
                          5. Bristol University Press
                          6. Edinburgh University Press
                          7. Emirates Center for Strategic Studies and Research
                          8. Facet Publishing
                        2. Partners (cont.)
                          1. Foundation Books
                          2. Intersentia
                          3. ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute
                          4. Jagiellonian University Press
                          5. Royal Economic Society
                          6. Unisa Press
                          7. The University of Adelaide Press
                          8. Wits University Press
                    2. Services
                        1. About
                            1. About Cambridge Core
                              1. About
                              2. Accessibility
                              3. CrossMark policy
                              4. Ethical Standards
                            2. Environment and sustainability
                              1. Environment and sustainability
                              2. Reducing print
                              3. Journals moving to online only
                            3. Guides
                              1. User guides
                              2. User Guides and Videos
                              3. Support Videos
                              4. Training
                            4. Help
                              1. Cambridge Core help
                              2. Contact us
                              3. Technical support
                          1. Agents
                              1. Services for agents
                                1. Services for agents
                                2. Journals for agents
                                3. Books for agents
                                4. Price list
                            1. Authors
                                1. Journals
                                  1. Journals
                                  2. Journal publishing statistics
                                  3. Corresponding author
                                  4. Seeking permission to use copyrighted material
                                  5. Publishing supplementary material
                                  6. Writing an effective abstract
                                  7. Journal production - FAQs
                                2. Journals (cont.)
                                  1. Author affiliations
                                  2. Co-reviewing policy
                                  3. Anonymising your manuscript
                                  4. Publishing open access
                                  5. Convert your article to Gold Open Access
                                  6. Publishing Open Access - webinars
                                3. Journals (cont.)
                                  1. Preparing and submitting your paper
                                  2. Publication journey
                                  3. Publishing agreement FAQs for journal authors
                                  4. Author Information Form FAQs
                                  5. Promoting your published paper
                                  6. Measuring impact
                                  7. Journals artwork guide
                                  8. Using ORCID
                                4. Books
                                  1. Books
                                  2. Marketing your book
                                  3. Author guides for Cambridge Elements
                              1. Corporates
                                  1. Corporates
                                    1. Commercial reprints
                                    2. Advertising
                                    3. Sponsorship
                                    4. Book special sales
                                    5. Contact us
                                1. Editors
                                    1. Information
                                      1. Journal development
                                      2. Peer review for editors
                                      3. Open access for editors
                                      4. Policies and guidelines
                                    2. Resources
                                      1. The editor's role
                                      2. Open research for editors
                                      3. Engagement and promotion
                                      4. Blogging
                                      5. Social media
                                  1. Librarians
                                      1. Information
                                        1. Open Access for Librarians
                                        2. Transformative agreements
                                        3. Transformative Agreements - FAQs
                                        4. Evidence based acquisition
                                        5. Cambridge libraries of the world podcast
                                        6. Purchasing models
                                        7. Journals Publishing Updates
                                      2. Products
                                        1. Cambridge frontlist
                                        2. Cambridge journals digital archive
                                        3. Hot topics
                                        4. Other digital products
                                        5. Perpetual access products
                                        6. Price list
                                        7. Developing country programme
                                        8. New content
                                      3. Tools
                                        1. Eligibility checker
                                        2. Transformative agreements
                                        3. KBART
                                        4. MARC records
                                        5. Using MARCEdit for MARC records
                                        6. Inbound OpenURL specifications
                                        7. COUNTER usage reporting
                                      4. Resources
                                        1. Catalogues and resources
                                        2. Making the most of your EBA
                                        3. Posters
                                        4. Leaflets and brochures
                                        5. Additional resources
                                        6. Find my sales contact
                                        7. Training
                                        8. Read and publish resources
                                    1. Peer review
                                        1. Peer review
                                          1. How to peer review journal articles
                                          2. How to peer review book proposals
                                          3. How to peer review Registered Reports
                                          4. Peer review FAQs
                                          5. Ethics in peer review
                                          6. Online peer review systems
                                          7. A guide to Publons
                                      1. Publishing ethics
                                          1. Journals
                                            1. Publishing ethics guidelines for journals
                                            2. Core editorial policies for journals
                                            3. Authorship and contributorship for journals
                                            4. Affiliations for journals
                                            5. Research ethics for journals
                                            6. Competing interests and funding for journals
                                          2. Journals (cont.)
                                            1. Data and supporting evidence for journals
                                            2. Misconduct for journals
                                            3. Corrections, retractions and removals for journals
                                            4. Versions and adaptations for journals
                                            5. Libel, defamation and freedom of expression
                                            6. Business ethics journals
                                          3. Books
                                            1. Publishing ethics guidelines for books
                                            2. Core editorial policies for books
                                            3. Authorship and contributorship for books
                                            4. Affiliations for books
                                            5. Research ethics for books
                                            6. Competing interests and funding for books
                                          4. Books (cont.)
                                            1. Data and supporting evidence for books
                                            2. Misconduct for books
                                            3. Corrections, retractions and removals for books
                                            4. Versions and adaptations for books
                                            5. Libel, defamation and freedom of expression
                                            6. Business ethics books
                                        1. Publishing partners
                                            1. Publishing partners
                                              1. Publishing partnerships
                                              2. Partner books
                                              3. eBook publishing partnerships
                                              4. Journal publishing partnerships
                                            2. Publishing partners (cont.)
                                              1. Journals publishing
                                              2. Customer support
                                              3. Membership Services
                                              4. Our Team
                                        2. Open research
                                            1. Open access policies
                                                1. Open access policies
                                                  1. Open research
                                                  2. Open access policies
                                                  3. Cambridge University Press and Plan S
                                                  4. Text and data mining
                                                  5. Preprint policy
                                                  6. Social sharing
                                                2. Journals
                                                  1. Open access journals
                                                  2. Gold Open Access journals
                                                  3. Transformative journals
                                                  4. Green Open Access policy for journals
                                                  5. Transparent pricing policy for journals
                                                3. Books and Elements
                                                  1. Open access books
                                                  2. Gold open access books
                                                  3. Green Open Access policy for books
                                                  4. Open access Elements
                                              1. Open access publishing
                                                  1. About open access
                                                    1. Open research
                                                    2. Open Access Week
                                                    3. What is open access?
                                                    4. Open access glossary
                                                    5. Open access myths
                                                    6. Hybrid Open Access FAQs
                                                    7. Eligibility checker
                                                  2. Open access resources
                                                    1. Open access resources
                                                    2. Benefits of open access
                                                    3. Creative commons licences
                                                    4. Funder policies and mandates
                                                    5. Article type definitions
                                                    6. Convert your article to Gold Open Access
                                                    7. Open access video resources
                                                1. Open research initiatives
                                                    1. Research transparency
                                                      1. Transparency and openness
                                                      2. Open Practice Badges
                                                      3. OA organisations, initiatives & directories
                                                      4. Registered Reports
                                                      5. Annotation for Transparent Inquiry (ATI)
                                                    2. Journal flips
                                                      1. Open access journal flips
                                                      2. OA Journal Flip FAQs
                                                    3. Flip it Open
                                                      1. Flip it Open
                                                      2. Flip it Open FAQs
                                                  1. Open access funding
                                                      1. Open access funding
                                                        1. Funding open access publication
                                                        2. Cambridge Open Equity Initiative
                                                        3. Completing a RightsLink (open access) transaction
                                                    1. Cambridge Open Engage
                                                        1. Cambridge Open Engage
                                                          1. Cambridge Open Engage
                                                          2. Partner With Us
                                                          3. Branded Hubs
                                                          4. Event Workspaces
                                                          5. Partner Resources
                                                          6. APSA Preprints
                                                          7. APSA Preprints FAQs
                                                    Hostname: page-component-7f64f4797f-d87pz Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2025-11-05T18:26:15.085Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

                                                    Buddhist Sanskrit

                                                    Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 March 2011

                                                    Extract

                                                    Professor Edgerton has offered us in his recent work on Buddhist Sanskrit (a monument to almost twenty years' labour) a material of delightful richness. It required both courage to undertake such a work and great persistence to carry it through. No doubt each reader will at first look eagerly to see how the cruces which have long baffled him have been resolved here; then to see how much new matter is offered in the elucidation of texts where he has himself after long searching been able to gather up some small amount of the widely scattered evidence. He may even venture to estimate how much of the harvest has been garnered and how much still remains to be brought in.


                                                    Information

                                                    Type
                                                    Articles
                                                    Copyright
                                                    Copyright © The Royal Asiatic Society 1955

                                                    Access options

                                                    Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

                                                    Article purchase

                                                    Temporarily unavailable


                                                    References

                                                    page 13 note 1

                                                    page 13 note 1 Edgerton, Franklin, Buddhist Hybrid Sanskrit, Grammar and Dictionary, 2 vols.Google Scholar; Buddhist Hybrid Sanskrit Reader, 1953, Yale University Press (London: Geoffrey Cumberlege). Price 97s. 6d. and 16sGoogle Scholar.

                                                    page 14 note 1

                                                    page 14 note 1 The reading with -rda- not -rna in the Krorayina texts has been confirmed by an examination of the facsimile, where T. Burrow had left it uncertain in BSOS. 7.780.

                                                    page 14 note 2

                                                    page 14 note 2 See Burrow, T., BSOS. 7.509 ff., 779ff.Google Scholar; H. W. Bailey, BSOAS. 10.917; Pelliot, P., Mélanges Linossier ii 426430Google Scholar; Tavadia, J., Indo-Iranian Studies i 6985Google Scholar.

                                                    page 15 note 1

                                                    page 15 note 1 This udranga- is quoted in the compound mahodranga- from the Kuṭṭanī-mata 936

                                                    abhyantara-vyayārthaṃ na vilabdho yo mayā mahodrangaḥ

                                                    tatrāpi te' nubandho no jāne kiṃ, karomīti

                                                    by Burrow, T., Language of the Kharoṣṭhī Documents, p. 99Google Scholar. The commentator explained by nagarī “town”, and understood the “income from a town”. He quoted the following verse from the lexicon Vācaspati-koia:—

                                                    Karvaṭādhamo drangaḥ pattanād uttamaś ca saḥ

                                                    udrangaś ca niveśaś ca sa eva dranga ity api.

                                                    In my copy of the Kuṭṭanī-mata there is a marginal note by J. J. Meyer giving a variant reading mahādrangaḥ.

                                                    page 15 note 2

                                                    page 15 note 2 See W. B. Henning, BSOAS. 12.605, note 4.

                                                    page 15 note 3

                                                    page 15 note 3 Ghilain, A., Essai sur la langue parthe, p. 51Google Scholar; Henning, W. B., BSOAS. 11.485Google Scholar.

                                                    page 15 note 4

                                                    page 15 note 4 Siddha-sāra 126 v 5; IIFL 2, 464.

                                                    page 15 note 5

                                                    page 15 note 5 As évasti for svasti in Krorayina, see Burrow, T., Language, p. 21Google Scholar.

                                                    page 16 note 1

                                                    page 16 note 1 Burrow, T., Language, p. 79Google Scholar, Translation, nos. 340, 637; H. Luders, Acta Oriental. 18.40 ff.

                                                    page 16 note 2

                                                    page 16 note 2 Lüders, H., Bhārhut und die bud. Literatur (1941), p. 45Google Scholar, wrongly opposed this view.

                                                    page 16 note 3

                                                    page 16 note 3 Morgenstierne, G., Report on a Linguistic Mission to Afghanistan, p. 72Google Scholar.

                                                    page 16 note 4

                                                    page 16 note 4 Facsimile by J. Bacot, cited below as Lex. Bacot.

                                                    page 16 note 5

                                                    page 16 note 5 Jātaka-stava 11 r 1, 12 v 3, in Khotanese Texts i.

                                                    page 17 note 1

                                                    page 17 note 1 Khotanese Texts i, p. 236 (haṃdramä only here).

                                                    page 17 note 2

                                                    page 17 note 2 In Kharoṣṭhi script, see most recently Whitehead, R. B., Numismatic Chronicle 1947, 1 ffGoogle Scholar.

                                                    page 17 note 3

                                                    page 17 note 3 Transactions of the Philological Soc. 1946, 150 ff.

                                                    page 17 note 4

                                                    page 17 note 4 G. Morgenstierne, Indo-Iranian Frontier Languages 2.268.

                                                    page 17 note 5

                                                    page 17 note 5 The details can be seen (Sanskrit, Tibetan, Khotanese) in BS0AS. 13.922 ff.

                                                    page 17 note 6

                                                    page 17 note 6 Khotanese Texts i 238, 54 v 4.

                                                    page 18 note 1

                                                    page 18 note 1 199 r 5 and 215 v 7. These Tibetan words are not in the three dictionaries of Jäschke, Desgodins, and Das. For the use of li before plant names see the note of Laufer, B., Loan-words in Tibetan, p. 55, note 1Google Scholar. In the Siddhasāra the Tib. li doṅ-gra is rendered by ttāṃgare (= ttuṃgare) “ginger” (Khotan. 12 v 2 = Tib. 143 r 7).

                                                    page 18 note 2

                                                    page 18 note 2 Hobson-Jobson, s.v. Zedoary.

                                                    page 18 note 3

                                                    page 18 note 3 Greater Bundahišn 116.7; 118.8.

                                                    page 18 note 4

                                                    page 18 note 4 Siddhasāra 122 v 2 ysuma-, Tib. śa-khu “flesh broth”, quoted earlier in BSOS. 8.141.

                                                    page 18 note 5

                                                    page 18 note 5 Miscell. Acad. Berolinensia 1950, A Kharoṣṭhī Document and the Arapacana Alphabet, p. 197.

                                                    page 18 note 6

                                                    page 18 note 6 See BSOAS. 14.531.

                                                    page 18 note 7

                                                    page 18 note 7 See P. Pelliot, T'oung Pao 26.261.

                                                    page 18 note 8

                                                    page 18 note 8 Khotanese Texts ii 54, Ch. 1.0021 a, a 15; Sanskrit text P 2855 verso 1; 2 (unpubld).

                                                    page 19 note 1

                                                    page 19 note 1 Ed. M. A. Stein, 8.2216 putrau dattavato nīviṃ.

                                                    page 19 note 2

                                                    page 19 note 2 Freiman, A., Khorezmijskij Jazyk, pp. 87–8Google Scholar, fī nibāk “with pledge” and banibāk “without pledge”.

                                                    page 19 note 3

                                                    page 19 note 3 This word he had received from W. B. Henning.

                                                    page 19 note 4

                                                    page 19 note 4 namani is found also in no. 769, edited by T. Burrow in BSOS. 9.113.

                                                    page 19 note 5

                                                    page 19 note 5 The closer i- vowel may have been opened before the labial v or m, as happened in NPers. namūnah “specimen”.

                                                    page 20 note 1

                                                    page 20 note 1 Khotanese Texts i, p. 178, 97 v 3.

                                                    page 20 note 2

                                                    page 20 note 2 Hoernle, A. F. R., Manuscript Remains, p. 13Google Scholar.

                                                    page 20 note 3

                                                    page 20 note 3 Indian Hist. Quarterly 7.274–5.

                                                    page 20 note 4

                                                    page 20 note 4 Bagchi, P., Deux lexiques i 336Google Scholar; ii 446, text 63 a 1.

                                                    page 20 note 5

                                                    page 20 note 5 Lüders, H., Weitere Beiträge, p. 21, note 1, as paryyanaGoogle Scholar.

                                                    page 20 note 6

                                                    page 20 note 6 Müller, F. W. K., Uigurica 3.35Google Scholar; von Gabain, A., Biographie Hüen-Tsangs, p. 21Google Scholar.

                                                    page 20 note 7

                                                    page 20 note 7 Such a meaning for pari-cay- can be seen in the Iranian Yidya paržīn “enclosure for sheep”, for which and other connected words see G. Morgenstierne, Indo-Iran. Frontier Languages 2.240.

                                                    page 20 note 8

                                                    page 20 note 8 Khotanese Buddhist Texts 49 and 103.

                                                    page 20 note 9

                                                    page 20 note 9 315 b 5 and Tocharische Grammatik, p. 59.

                                                    page 21 note 1

                                                    page 21 note 1 Sylvain Lévi, 3 A. 1915.1.113; Lüders, H., Weitere Beiträge, p. 40Google Scholar.

                                                    page 21 note 2

                                                    page 21 note 2 Recognized by Pelliot, P., Mélanges Linossier ii 429 ffGoogle Scholar.

                                                    page 21 note 3

                                                    page 21 note 3 Khotanese Buddhist Texts, p. 141, line 1001.

                                                    page 21 note 4

                                                    page 21 note 4 BSOAS. 13.937.

                                                    page 21 note 5

                                                    page 21 note 5 BSOAS. 11.497, O 2; 17. I take this opportunity to explain the verse O 5. Here parikirya'i represents paricaryaya “service” with -k- secondarily introduced for -y- replacing -y- from -c-. In pada d we have to read udakaruḍhu “descending into the water, bathing” from udaka- and avaruḍha- (with -ā- from -ava-) to agree with Pali references to udakorohana- as in Dīgha-Nikāya i 167. The sign earlier read -rka- certainly does not contain -r-, but stands for --, the only case of the mark of length so far noted here. I have also found misreadings of c for j in 12 muje'a, mujadi, 23 kaji, 25, 26 ja, which need to be corrected.

                                                    page 21 note 6

                                                    page 21 note 6 The -y- of -vaṭya is not certain. The Gilgit Manuscript (2.142.9) rājavadya is probably a misreading for -vaṭya.

                                                    page 22 note 1

                                                    page 22 note 1 In Das's Dictionary.

                                                    page 22 note 2

                                                    page 22 note 2 Pali saṃvaṭṭa and vivaṭṭa come from saṃvarta and vivarta-; in Bud.Sanskrit vaṭṭa- “round” corresponds to vṛtta-.

                                                    page 22 note 3

                                                    page 22 note 3 Finot, L., Les lapidaires indiens, p. xviiiGoogle Scholar, with the short -a-; on p. 201 with the long -ā-.

                                                    page 22 note 4

                                                    page 22 note 4 The Indianizing etymology is given in Rāja-nighaṇṭu, 13.214–16, ed. Garbe, R., p. 28, where rāja- taken as “king” is replaced by nṛpa-Google Scholar.

                                                    page 22 note 5

                                                    page 22 note 5 JA. 1936.1.228; F. W. K. Müller, Uigurica 4.31.

                                                    page 22 note 6

                                                    page 22 note 6 The vowels are found in Armen. lazvart', lažvard, lažurd.

                                                    page 22 note 7

                                                    page 22 note 7 Pašai keeps older w- and b- distinct, as in waḍḍ- “grow” vardh-, but buḍai from “old” from *bṝḍha-. Khowar keeps -rt-.

                                                    page 22 note 8

                                                    page 22 note 8 For these words for “stone” see G. Morgenstierne, NTS. 7.12; NTS. 13.279; Report on a Linguistic Mission to North- Western India, p 50; Report … to Afghanistan, p. 71; Notes on Phalūṛa, 11FL2. 549.

                                                    page 22 note 9

                                                    page 22 note 9 Siddhasāra 148 v 5, translating Tib. mchiṅ-bu, Sansk. kāca- “crystal”.

                                                    page 22 note 10

                                                    page 22 note 10 Variation of - and ū- (and uyy-) is known in vūy-, ǔy-, uyy- “survey”, see BS0AS. 10.910, and JRAS. 1953.

                                                    page 23 note 1

                                                    page 23 note 1 In the Lex. Bacot 112 b 1 bahoḍa is put in error for baheḍa. For p'i-li-lo, see Bagchi, P., Deux Lexiques i, no. 1008, p. 303Google Scholar.

                                                    page 23 note 2

                                                    page 23 note 2 Ch. c. 001.

                                                    page 23 note 3

                                                    page 23 note 3 cukra- is miswritten ćakra-, and yona- (? yonra-) is written for lona.

                                                    page 23 note 4

                                                    page 23 note 4 In Krorayina the adj. śuki in the phrase 169 śuki masu we have a derivative by suffix -ya- from suka- from śukta-, with the -k- = -kk- as in Prak. mukka- from mukta-. In 387 śukha masu represents śukta madhu, that is, “vinegar”.

                                                    page 23 note 5

                                                    page 23 note 5 G. Morgenstierne, NTS. 2.280.

                                                    page 24 note 1

                                                    page 24 note 1 Lidén, E., Zeit.f. vgl. Sprachf. 61 (1934)Google Scholar, Zur indogerm. Terminologie der Milchwirtschaft, assumed a form *silu- and proposed to trace the base śar- “break” in it, as in Old Ind. śara- “sour cream”. But the Digor sulu makes it more likely that the base is su-. This could be traced to a base Indo-Eur. ken- “swell”, just as Avestan tūirya- “made into cheese” can be traced to teu- “swell”. Yidya silyo “cream” <*sidakā IIFL 2.246.

                                                    page 24 note 2

                                                    page 24 note 2 See Lüders, H., Weitere Beitrüge, p. 21, note 1Google Scholar. The prahāṇa-śālā is evidently the equivalent of the Khotan. jāya-śāṣṭaa- discussed in BSOAS. 14.532.

                                                    page 24 note 3

                                                    page 24 note 3 Bharhut und die buddhistische Literatur (1941), p. 174; and ZDMG. 99 (19451949)Google Scholar, Vidhurapaṇḍdita, Jātaka, p. 112.

                                                    page 24 note 4

                                                    page 24 note 4 NTS 14.27.

                                                    Cited by
                                                    This article has been cited by the following publications. This list is generated based on data provided by Crossref.

                                                    Bailey, H. W. 1983. The Cambridge History of Iran. p. 1230.

                                                    ×
                                                    ×
                                                    Morty Proxy This is a proxified and sanitized view of the page, visit original site.

                                                    Save article to Kindle

                                                    To send this article to your Kindle, first ensure no-reply@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about sending to your Kindle. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

                                                    Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

                                                    Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

                                                    Buddhist Sanskrit
                                                    Available formats
                                                    ×

                                                    Save article to Dropbox

                                                    To save this article to your Dropbox account, please select one or more formats and confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you used this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your Dropbox account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

                                                    Buddhist Sanskrit
                                                    Available formats
                                                    ×

                                                    Save article to Google Drive

                                                    To save this article to your Google Drive account, please select one or more formats and confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you used this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your Google Drive account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

                                                    Buddhist Sanskrit
                                                    Available formats
                                                    ×
                                                    ×

                                                    Reply to: Submit a response

                                                    Contents help

                                                    - No HTML tags allowed
                                                    - Web page URLs will display as text only
                                                    - Lines and paragraphs break automatically
                                                    - Attachments, images or tables are not permitted

                                                    Please enter your response.

                                                    Your details

                                                    Email help

                                                    Your email address will be used in order to notify you when your comment has been reviewed by the moderator and in case the author(s) of the article or the moderator need to contact you directly.

                                                    Please enter a valid email address.

                                                    You have entered the maximum number of contributors

                                                    Conflicting interests

                                                    Do you have any conflicting interests? * Conflicting interests help

                                                    Please list any fees and grants from, employment by, consultancy for, shared ownership in or any close relationship with, at any time over the preceding 36 months, any organisation whose interests may be affected by the publication of the response. Please also list any non-financial associations or interests (personal, professional, political, institutional, religious or other) that a reasonable reader would want to know about in relation to the submitted work. This pertains to all the authors of the piece, their spouses or partners.