Browse Items (21 total)

  • Tags: today

https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/53612580861_918c8e2838_o.jpg
In October 1969, the editors of American Heritage sent E.B. White a copy, hoping for an endorsement. He politely declined, but his letter ended cryptically: “I must return to the kitchen now and continue with my preparation of vichyssoise. Yrs, EB…

Tags:

Strange to say, but in the year 2024 there is still no comprehensive dictionary of one of the most distinctive and historically important varieties of English—that used in African American communities. (The pioneering Clarence Major focused only on…

Tags:

letterburchfield.jpg
Born in New Zealand in 1923, Burchfield came to Magdalen College, Oxford, as a Rhodes Scholar. He became editor of the Supplement to the Oxford English Dictionary in 1957. He later wrote several popular books, including The English Language (1985)…

Tags:

https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/53613032285_54da25662f_b.jpg
Though it had been in the works for decades, the timing of The Random House Dictionary was propitious: the controversy surrounding Webster’s Third created a demand for a big dictionary with a more traditional balance between descriptivism and…

Tags:

https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/53612805188_846cb8faa0_o.jpg
Though little new research was involved in merging the OED with its Supplement, it’s hard to conceive the scale of the task of producing this second edition. Typing the dictionary’s third of a billion characters took 120 person-years, and…

Tags:

https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/53613031975_96269bfe59_b.jpg
Lexicographic modernity begins with Philip Babcock Gove (1902–1972), named chief editor at Merriam after William Allan Neilson’s death in 1946. Gove brought the latest thinking in linguistics to bear on practical lexicography, including one principle…

Tags:

https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/53612790908_51247bcc53_b.jpg
With its quirky defining style, its omission of 250,000 obsolete words (an “incredible massacre”—Dwight Macdonald) to make room for 100,000 new ones (rock ’n’ roll, schlemiel, yakety-yak), its use of celebrities rather than literary greats for…

Tags:

https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/53612923459_6a0930a107_b.jpg
The moment the OED was completed in 1928, it was dated. A stopgap supplement was completed five years later, but the language kept evolving. When in 1957 Robert W. Burchfield was charged with bringing the big dictionary up to date, it was thought…

Tags:

https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/53612790543_56433b5d0a_b.jpg
The OED was digitized to produce the printed OED2, but the invention of the CD-ROM in the mid-1980s made it possible to distribute the entire dictionary to users who could never have afforded (or found room for) 20 heavy volumes. More important, when…

Tags:

Output Formats

atom, dcmes-xml, json, omeka-xml, rss2