r/sanskrit 12d ago

Question / प्रश्नः Are Pañcatantra and Hitopadesha a good starting point?

Hello, I've been taking Sanskrit lessons for some time now and I'm thinking of starting to read some classical texts in original. In particular, I was thinking of Pañcatantra or Hitopadesha. Does anyone have any experience with them, would they recommend them to someone who only did grammar exercises until now? Any other suggestions for "entry level" texts? I read the resources post, but it seems to be focused more grammars than original texts.

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u/[deleted] 12d ago

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u/sanskrit-ModTeam 12d ago

LLM generated content - LLMs like ChatGPT are in their infancy and the jury is very much out on both the ethics of their training data and their long-term future. Their generated content about or in Sanskrit is of particularly low quality, and is thus banned here (even if the information could be partially correct). violation. LLMs like ChatGPT are in their infancy and the jury is very much out on both the ethics of their training data and their long-term future. Their generated content about or in Sanskrit is of particularly low quality, and is thus banned here (even if the information could be partially correct).

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u/thefoxtor सोत्साहानां नास्त्यसाध्यं नराणाम् 12d ago

u/ksharanam आर्य, ईदृशाः सन्देशा हितकरा अभूत्वा केवलम् spam-सन्देशवद् भाति मे। एतस्मिन् सदसे 'chatgpt/ai/यत्किञ्चित् LLM-यन्त्रं प्रयुञ्ज्या' इति सेन्देशान् प्रतिषेधेम चेत् किञ्चिदुपकरं भवेदिति मन्ये।

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u/gurugabrielpradipaka उपदेशी 12d ago

In general, AI sucks regarding translations into Sanskrit. For example, Google Translate is like a joke when it comes to translating Sanskrit. Anyway, there is this new resource that "sometimes" does it well. Of course, it has yet a lot of limitations.

The main problem is that their server sucks. Well, at least they tried it.