found: Tripiṭaka. Buddhist scriptures, 1913.
found: Encyc. Brit., 15th ed.:v. 15, p. 445 (Milindapañha, a remarkable Buddhist noncanonical work in seven parts written in elegant Pali about the 1st cent. B.C. in northwestern India or Kashmir by an unknown author (or authors); Miliñda, a Bactrian Greek king, called Menander by Greek historians, is represented as questioning Nagaseña, an erudite Buddhist monk (possibly not a historical person) on important Buddhist teachings; Miliñda (in pt. IV) propounds 82 dilemmas; Nagaseña's solutions, still authoritative today; Miliñda's doubts ... dispelled, etc.; compilation of great literary charm ... long recognized as a masterpiece of Indian literature)
found: Its The Milindapañho, 1880.
found: Milindapañhā. Nan chʻuan Mi-lan wang wen ching, 1997.
found: Fo kuang ta tzʻu tien, 1989:p. 3022 (Na-hsien pi chʻiu ching, short title Na-hsien ching; original title in Pali is Milindapañhā; title of Chinese translation is Mi-lan-tʻo wang wen ching)