Respectful title to address a Buddhist monk or nun
Bhante (Pali; Burmese: ဘန္á€á€±, pronounced[bà ɰ̃tè]; Sanskrit: bhavantaḥ),[1] sometimes also Bhadanta, is a respectful title used to address Buddhistmonks, nuns, and superiors, especially in the Theravada tradition. In English, the term is often translated as Venerable.[2]
Etymology
Bhante is a gender-neutral term, and may be used to address both monks and nuns. It is the vocative form of the word bhadanta, which confers recognition of greatness and respect.[3]
The Nepali terms bare and bande have the same derivation and are used to address Buddhist clergy.[4] Bhante can also be used as an honorific or a form of address to specific Buddhist monks, similar to Ajahn, Phra or Luang Por in Thailand or Ashin in Burma (now Myanmar), Rinpoche in Tibet.
Some famous monks who are addressed with bhante include:
Grammatically "bhante" is a vocative case form of a Pali word "bhadanta" (venerable, reverend). The vocative case denotes and is used for address.[5]
In literature
The title bhante is used among monks to address superiors within the sangha. The Pali Canon abounds with references to the Buddha's disciples addressing their seniors in this way. While the Buddha is usually addressed with the term BhagavÄn, his disciples also sometimes addressed him as Bhante.
^Rhys Davids, Thomas William; Steele, William, eds. (1905). The Pali-English dictionary (Reprint of Oxford 1905 edition, circa 1997 ed.). New Delhi / Chennai: Asian Educational Services. p. 498. ISBN81-206-1273-6.