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A Pāli Dictionary written in the twelfth
century by Moggallāna Thera of Ceylon, following the style and the method of the
Sanskrit Amarakosa.
It is in three parts, dealing with
"celestial, terrestrial and miscellaneous objects," and each part is sub divided
into several sections, which are not all mutually exclusive. The whole book is a
dictionary of synonyms, all the names given to one particular thing being
grouped together and put into verse for the purpose of memorisation.
A Samvannanā was written by a Burmese
Officer-of-State under King Kittisīhasūra (A.D. 1351), and there exists a
Burmese translation of the eighteenth century. In Ceylon itself a sanna
(paraphrase) and a tīkā have been written, the sanna being the older and by far
the more valuable work. Gv.62, 63; Svd.v.1253; Sās.65; see also P.L.C. 187-9;
Bode, op. cit., 67.

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