Bless us with your sparkling love šŸ’– let us know any mistakes and typos

Here are typos I have found so far in site articles:

In Home page

  • redundant space after period

SuttaCentral brings these together and makes them freely available.-

In Methodology article

  • redundant ā€˜sā€™ in seems

While the method might seems a little arcane at first, once you have remembered a few abbreviations it is really quite simple.

  • missing ā€˜areā€™?

In almost all cases, it is clear that a particular rule is a full parallel of the other rules, in the sense that they different versions of the same ā€œthingā€.

In General guide

  • Khuddaka Nikāya isnā€™t bold, whereas other Nikāyas are in bold in the list

Sutta Piį¹­aka (Basket of Discourses)

  • DÄ«gha Nikāya (Long Discourses)
  • Majjhima Nikāya (Middle Discourses)
  • Saį¹yutta Nikāya (Linked Discourses)
  • Aį¹…guttara Nikāya (Numbered Discourses)
  • Khuddaka Nikāya (Minor Discourses)

In Long discourses guide

  • collected ā†’ connected

Curiously enough, however, it is not found among the collected connected discourses on the path found in the last book of the Saį¹yutta.

  • excess sutta in

The Great Discourse on the Harvest of Deeds (Mahāpadānasuttasutta)

In Middle length discourses guide

  • redundant whitespace before period

with the lessening of greed and hate they reach the state of a once-returner .

  • long ā in Mahā-

The traditional account says that this was on the instigation of the Buddhaā€™s step-mother, MahapajāpatÄ« GotamÄ«

  • redundant ā€˜theā€™

Venerables Sāriputta and Moggallāna speak of the those who have ā€œblemishesā€

  • unclosed parentheses

The Shorter Discourse at Gosiį¹…ga (CÅ«įø·agosiį¹…gasutta depicts an idyllic fellowship

in Linked discourses guide

  • whitespace after opening parenthesis

and the Pali texts as ā€œI am thatā€ ( SN 22.8: eso hamasmi)

  • missing ā€˜mā€™ in dhammānupassanā

The quality of wisdom, for example, is called ā€œobservation of principlesā€ (dhamānupassanā)

  • sutta number SN 46.56 ā†’ SN 46.55.
    SN 46.56 Is Abhayasutta, whereas the text mentions Saį¹…gāravasutta (SN 46.55)

In SN 46.56, a brahmin asks the Buddha why he can sometimes remember his chanting and sometimes cannot.

  • sutta number SN 45.6 ā†’ SN 46.6

The set as a whole emerges from the practice of the four kinds of mindfulness meditation and the series of practices that underlie them (SN 45.6)

On Subjects page

  • Link to MN 107 is broken because of redundant ā€˜.ā€™ in the hyperlink

Gradual training
anupubba-sikkhā
DN 2, MN 107.

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