Hi Bryan,
I couldn't access the cheat sheet in DPR by pressing "C", (current
version of DPR maps it to a converter screen), but I did find the cheet
sheet via a link in help section of DPR (click on the "?" near the very
bottom of screen on the navigation bar).
It's a good help sheet (I have trouble calling it a cheat sheet -
attachment to virtue), but it doesn't address one thing an alphabetized
list of suffixes would. That is, many of the declensions share the same
suffix, so in the alphabetized index the entry for that suffix could
tell you which cases that suffix might be referring to (gender, case,
plurality). This is extremely useful for a Pali beginner like myself
eager to dive in reading pali suttas while still in the process of
gradually learning the grammar. The existing tables such as
http://www.accesstoinsight.org/lib/authors/nyanatusita/ are thorough ,
but not useful for finding the reverse mapping.
I think Stephen's photos exactly address that need, but the photos
linked by Yong Peng yesterday are too small to be legible (I wrote Yong
Peng offlist to ask whether the larger photos exist somewhere). Once I
get the my hands on larger photos, I'll run the photos through an OCR
program to see if it can be digitized into a normal text file. No, that
won't work the diacritics will confuse the program.

-Frank

On 2/13/2011 4:12 AM, Bryan Levman wrote:
>
> Dear Ven. BKh,
>
> Have you seen the Pali Cheat Sheet which is bundled with the Digital
> Pāli Reader? It has some of the material you are looking for. Just
> press "C" on the right hand side of the main page,
>
> Best wishes, Bryan
>
> --- On Fri, 2/11/11, bkhpali <bkhpali@...
> <mailto:bkhpali%40gmail.com>> wrote:
>
> From: bkhpali <bkhpali@... <mailto:bkhpali%40gmail.com>>
> Subject: [Pali] Index of Pali endings
> To: Pali@yahoogroups.com <mailto:Pali%40yahoogroups.com>
> Received: Friday, February 11, 2011, 10:02 PM
>
>
>
> Dear Friends,
>
> I'm wondering if anyone has created or knows where to find a
> chart/index of all the endings used in Pali and what their possible
> meanings are. I remember using something like this in a book called
> The Pali Workbook by Lynn Martineau. I'm looking for something digital
> that is free to distribute.
>
> I've started working on something like this, but wanted to see if
> anyone else has already done it. I looked through the file section and
> did an archive search with no luck.
>
> Best wishes,
>
> BKh
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>



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