We see a coinage, namely Theravādin, used in reference to adherents of Theravāda.
What is the Pāli for “Theravādin”? Is “Theravādin” already Pāli?
In Mahāyāna, there is a Sanskrit term for ‘Mahāyānists’, namely mahāyānika, similar in construction to mādhyamika and abhidharmika, I assume.
Is there a *-vādika suffix for Theravāda that mirrors “Mahāyāna --> mahāyānika”?
seniya
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There is an entri of -vadin and -vadika in the PTS dictionary:
Noun: theravāda
Adj: theravādin (masc. sg. theravadī, masc. pl. theravādino… etc)
Adding the -in suffix is a “secondary derivative” or “taddhita” that makes an adjective. It causes the root vowel to take the vṛddhi grade, though e is the vṛddhi in Pāli. So it doesn’t change in this case - this is more of a feature of Sanskrit (cf jina > jaina).
Skt. (n) mahāyāna -> (adj) māhāyānika
Skt. madhyamaka -> mādhyamika
Skt. abhidharma -> ābhidharmika
There are many ways to make adjective in Pāli, as there are in English. Vādika is certainly a word meaning “one who speaks”.
But since theravādin is an adjective, you don’t need to add anything to it. Your problem is that if you want to use a Pāli plural then it is gendered and you’d have to specify which gender you mean.
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If you are so inclined, what would these plural forms be?
m. & n. theravādino
f. theravādiniyo
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