The Pali audio app offers a selection of suttas from the Pali canon
in English translation which have been professionally read and
recorded.
App function->
-Select Nikaya
-Select Sutta
-Play sutta audio
-Download sutta audio
-Share sutta audio
-Add favorite sutta
-Recent play list
The app follows the arrangement of the Sutta-piá¹aka which consists of four primary collections (nikÄyas): the DÄ«gha-nikÄya or collection of long sayings comprises thirty-four suttas; the Majjhima-nikÄya or collection of middle length sayings comprises of 152 suttas; the Saṃyutta-nikÄya or collection of grouped sayings is arranged in fifty-six groups of suttas according to topic the Aá¹…guttara-nikÄya or collection of numbered sayings is arranged in eleven sections according to the number of items that form the main subject-matter.
The suttas of the Pali canon were originally composed orally and then transmitted orally for several centuries. Listening to the suttas is thus a particularly appropriate way to gain familiarity with their teachings.
As Rupert Gethin observes in his introduction to Sayings of the Buddha the suttas are characterized by a certain repetitiveness: events that have just been narrated are immediately related in full to another person stock formulas are used to describe events people ideas. This repetitiveness is in part a reflection of their oral composition and transmission: repetition is a useful mnemonic device. But repetition is also used by the suttas to affect both the reciter and the listener and is integral to the suttas as literary works that are to be performed. The use of repetition gives the suttas a particular literary rhythm: there is no hurry to get information across; ideas and similes that are repeated have a meditative and poetic effect; they evoke images in our minds and stir our emotions as slowly we contemplate them again and again.
The app has been established by practitioners of the Buddha’s path. We are grateful for the support and guidance of Rupert Gethin of the University of Bristol although all errors and omissions remain ours.
App Development by Vikram Rane
App function->
-Select Nikaya
-Select Sutta
-Play sutta audio
-Download sutta audio
-Share sutta audio
-Add favorite sutta
-Recent play list
The app follows the arrangement of the Sutta-piá¹aka which consists of four primary collections (nikÄyas): the DÄ«gha-nikÄya or collection of long sayings comprises thirty-four suttas; the Majjhima-nikÄya or collection of middle length sayings comprises of 152 suttas; the Saṃyutta-nikÄya or collection of grouped sayings is arranged in fifty-six groups of suttas according to topic the Aá¹…guttara-nikÄya or collection of numbered sayings is arranged in eleven sections according to the number of items that form the main subject-matter.
The suttas of the Pali canon were originally composed orally and then transmitted orally for several centuries. Listening to the suttas is thus a particularly appropriate way to gain familiarity with their teachings.
As Rupert Gethin observes in his introduction to Sayings of the Buddha the suttas are characterized by a certain repetitiveness: events that have just been narrated are immediately related in full to another person stock formulas are used to describe events people ideas. This repetitiveness is in part a reflection of their oral composition and transmission: repetition is a useful mnemonic device. But repetition is also used by the suttas to affect both the reciter and the listener and is integral to the suttas as literary works that are to be performed. The use of repetition gives the suttas a particular literary rhythm: there is no hurry to get information across; ideas and similes that are repeated have a meditative and poetic effect; they evoke images in our minds and stir our emotions as slowly we contemplate them again and again.
The app has been established by practitioners of the Buddha’s path. We are grateful for the support and guidance of Rupert Gethin of the University of Bristol although all errors and omissions remain ours.
App Development by Vikram Rane
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Pali audio
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