A wat (erived from the Pali word avasa as well as from the Sanskrit word avasatha) is a monastery temple in Cambodia, Thailand or Laos. The word "wat" (Thai วัด) (sometimes rendered "vat" when referring to Laos) means "school." Strictly speaking a wat is a Buddhist sacred precinct with monks' quarters , the temple proper, an edifice housing a large image of Buddha, and a structure for lessons. A Buddhist site without a minimum of three resident monks cannot correctly be described as a wat, although the term is frequently used more loosely, even for ruins of ancient temples. (As a transitive or intransitive verb, wat means to measure, to take measurements; compare templum, which has the same root as template.)

Trivia about wat

  • It's a term for any Buddhist Temple in Thailand or Cambodia, like the Angkor one
  • Term for a Buddhist temple, there's a big one in Angkor
  • Each Thai village has one of these temples, a 3-letter term from Sanskrit for "enclosure"