In 1986, the Press published a third work, The Oxford Spelling Dictionary, compiled by R. E. Allen, which also gives word divisions. |
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Over a century ago, Charles Cutter established a methodology for creating library catalogs called Rules for a Dictionary Catalog. |
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I activated my small desktop computer and accessed the Official State Dictionary. |
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The Australian National Dictionary is a historical dictionary of some 10,000 Australianisms. |
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This paper describes the outcome of a project to code the complementation patterns of all the verbs in Collins COBUILD English Dictionary. |
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For example, the editors of the Oxford English Dictionary liken the lexicographer to the naturalist. |
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Each morning intelligence analysts log on at their computer terminals and enter the Dictionary system. |
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Chambers English Dictionary of 1872 included an eight page appendix of Americanisms printed in small type, three columns to a page. |
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Research for the new edition of the Collins English Dictionary has revealed that Hinglish words are being increasingly used in English. |
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The copyright page of my Random House Collegiate Dictionary, like the book's cover and spine, disappeared years ago. |
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He also wrote several short biographies on early identities to be included in Dictionary of New Zealand Biography. |
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He was an occasional obituarist for The Independent and The Guardian and a contributor to the New Dictionary of National Biography. |
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The author of The Dictionary of Word origins has traced its roots to Latin, Old Norse and prehistoric Germanic words. |
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As a child, I remember him working on all the galley proofs for Chambers School Dictionary. |
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The current editors of the Oxford English Dictionary have issued a press release. |
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I guess the Oxford English Dictionary cuts it more cleanly with a black and white approach. |
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If anyone is prone to believe this superstition, Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable soon puts them right. |
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We took four new inclusions and three older words from the Oxford Dictionary, and asked people in Bolton town centre what they meant. |
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The Skeptic's Dictionary is a compendium of detailed information about oft-repeated hoaxes, legends and quackery. |
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When I was a teenager I bought a book from a jumble sale called The Insult Dictionary which told you how to insult people in five languages. |
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It also features a spam Misspellings Dictionary with more than 400 examples of the most common misspellings of words used by spammers to bypass filters. |
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After drugs, the most frequent references and most expressive colloquialisms in The Hippie Dictionary deal with sexual intercourse and sexual organs. |
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He is also author of The nonverbal Dictionary, an influential volume in the field. |
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Jespersen later supplied phonetic transcriptions of the entries in Brynildsen's English and Dano-Norwegian Dictionary, which was the century's first pronouncing dictionary. |
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Another symptom of the problem I'm trying to describe is that the current Webster's II New College Dictionary lacks even a definition of the term! |
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Within the front matter, the authors of the Million Word Crossword Dictionary promise to consider all suggestions for new words and clues, for future editions. |
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A Dictionary for the Modern Flutist is the first resource of its kind dedicated to flute-related topics. |
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Cudden in his Dictionary of Literary Terms and Literary Theory, credited as Pessoa's creation. |
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Taber's Cyclopedic Medical Dictionary, 21st Edition publishes February 2009 in print, electronic, web, and mobile formats. |
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Pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis is the longest word in the English language, according to the Oxford English Dictionary. |
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A Dictionary of the English Language was somewhat large and very expensive. |
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For the possessive of the third person pronoun, the word its, first recorded in the Oxford English Dictionary in 1598, is avoided. |
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Samuel Johnson quoted him more often than any other author in his A Dictionary of the English Language, the first serious work of its type. |
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For a decade, Johnson's constant work on the Dictionary disrupted his and Tetty's living conditions. |
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Seven years after first meeting Johnson to go over the work, Chesterfield wrote two anonymous essays in The World recommending the Dictionary. |
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It was years before Johnson's Dictionary, as it came to be known, turned a profit. |
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Years later, many of its quotations would be repeated by various editions of the Webster's Dictionary and the New English Dictionary. |
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Besides working on the Dictionary, Johnson also wrote numerous essays, sermons, and poems during these nine years. |
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It now includes the Webster's New Word Vest Pocket Dictionary, autoscroll and text justification, among other features. |
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The entire first Folio edition is available on A Dictionary of the English Language as an electronic scan. |
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Ellis, English Dialect Grammar by Joseph Wright, and the English Dialect Dictionary also by Joseph Wright. |
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It was approved of by Joseph Wright, the founder of the Yorkshire Dialect Society and the author of the English Dialect Dictionary. |
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The Chambers Dictionary is the most useful and diverting single-column word-hoard available full of unique quirky definitions and word origins. |
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Music Printing and Publishing was an offprint of work on the New Grove Dictionary of Music. |
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This last material is judiciously gleaned from the author's larger 2007 ABC Etymological Dictionary of Old Chinese. |
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And teenagers will appreciate our Oxford Mathematics Study Dictionary and clinometers. |
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I remember when bomblet burst upon the scene in 1986, an entry in 12,000 Words, a supplement to Webster's 3rd New International Dictionary. |
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The Berlitz Dutch Phrasebook and Dictionary is excellent for this purpose and for translating signs and menus. |
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Jastrow, A Dictionary of the Targumim, the Talmud Babli and Yerushalmi, and the Midrashic Literature, vol. |
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The longest nonmedical word in the Dictionary is floccinaucinihilipilification, with 29 letters. |
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One such volume of missionary scholarship, the Dictionary of the Nyanja Language by Alexander Hetherwick et al. |
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According to the Oxford English Dictionary the longest word in the language is pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis, with 45 letters. |
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Hmong Picture Dictionary was specially created for home and educational setting among Hmong families and at schools. |
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And Austen also seems to anticipate the effects of a Flaubertian Dictionary of Received Ideas here, preparing us for fatuities to follow. |
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Adam of Bremen identifies his mother as Gunhild while the Dictionary of National Biography states that his mother's name is unknown. |
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Chaucer is also recorded in the Oxford English Dictionary as the first author to use many common English words in his writings. |
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Just before the publication of his Dictionary in 1755, Oxford University awarded Johnson the degree of Master of Arts. |
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Here he continued Don Juan and wrote the Ravenna Diary and My Dictionary and Recollections. |
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He later said that he had been most helped by Hubert Parry's articles in the Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians. |
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According to the New Oxford Dictionary of English, such use is increasingly rare in British English too. |
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According to the Oxford English Dictionary, this is the first recorded instance of the word. |
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This article incorporates text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. |
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He is the ninth most frequently quoted writer in The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations. |
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The Oxford English Dictionary defines five meanings of the noun barbarian, including an obsolete Barbary usage. |
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The Kangxi Emperor ordered the creation of the Kangxi Dictionary, the most complete dictionary of Chinese characters that had been compiled. |
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Yet, just as Johnson was plunging into another trough of despondency, the reputation of the Dictionary at last brought reward. |
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In 1846 he completed his Universal and Critical Dictionary of the English Language. |
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Johnson's Dictionary has been available in replica editions for some years. |
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In 1806, Webster published his first dictionary, A Compendious Dictionary of the English Language. |
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Webster dedicated his Speller and Dictionary to providing an intellectual foundation for American nationalism. |
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His 1828 American Dictionary contained the greatest number of Biblical definitions given in any reference volume. |
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Merriam Company created a significantly revised edition, A Dictionary of the English Language. |
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After Worcester's death in 1865, revision of his Dictionary of the English Language was soon discontinued and it eventually went out of print. |
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Daniel Jones transcribed RP pronunciations of a large number of words and names in the English Pronouncing Dictionary. |
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Wells, using the name Received Pronunciation, and the Oxford Dictionary of Pronunciation for Current English, compiled by Clive Upton. |
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Upton's Oxford Dictionary of Pronunciation for Current English gives both variants for BATH words. |
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The Star had always avoided using recognized Canadian spelling, citing the Gage Canadian Dictionary in their defence. |
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When the Gage Dictionary finally adopted standard Canadian spelling, the Star followed suit. |
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In 1997, the ITP Nelson Dictionary of the Canadian English Language was another product, but has not been updated since. |
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The Macquarie Dictionary is used by some universities and some other organisations as a standard for Australian English spelling. |
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Australia's Macquarie Dictionary was first published in 1981, and has since become the authority on Australian English. |
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Sweet was also closely involved in the early history of the Oxford English Dictionary. |
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The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language derives it from French hache from Latin haca or hic. |
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The words 'Bim' and 'Bimshire' are recorded in the Oxford English Dictionary and Chambers Twentieth Century Dictionaries. |
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Speed dating, hornbag, hasbian and sexaholic are all words to have entered the Desktop edition of the Collins English Dictionary. |
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To learn more about The Walking Dictionary find them on Facebook or visit TWDictionary. |
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As of 30 November 2005, the Oxford English Dictionary contained approximately 301,100 main entries. |
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The Concise Oxford Dictionary is a different work, which aims to cover current English only, without the historical focus. |
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The longest word in the Oxford English Dictionary is the 45-letter pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis, which refers to a form of lung disease. |
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A year ago, few would have heard of a halal snack pack, but now the new kebab shop favourite has been named one of the words of the year by Macquarie Dictionary. |
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In 1755 Samuel Johnson published his A Dictionary of the English Language which introduced a standard set of spelling conventions and usage norms. |
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Historically, most libraries and educational institutions in Canada have supported the use of the Oxford English Dictionary rather than the American Webster's Dictionary. |
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By 1747 Johnson had written his Plan of a Dictionary of the English Language, which spelled out his intentions and proposed methodology for preparing his document. |
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Seven years after first meeting Johnson to discuss the work, Chesterfield wrote two anonymous essays in The World that recommended the Dictionary. |
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Babbage's birthplace is disputed, but according to the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography he was most likely born at 44 Crosby Row, Walworth Road, London, England. |
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The only other word in the English language that rhymes with orange is sporange, which is in the Oxford English Dictionary and is a botanical term. |
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This is reflected in some notable recent reference works such as the New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians and the new edition of Musik in Geschichte und Gegenwart. |
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Finally he turned to the huge volumes of the Oxford English Dictionary where he found that the word 'sphairistic', labelled 'rare', meant tennis playing. |
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However, retrosexual along with other such words of the moment as freeganism and movieoke has yet to claim its place in the Oxford English Dictionary. |
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Show bosses released a statement regarding the role of Dictionary Corner regular Susie Dent at the weekend after the use of earpieces was revealed by a Sunday newspaper. |
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The Dictionary was finally published in April 1755, with the title page acknowledging that Oxford had awarded Johnson a Master of Arts degree in anticipation of the work. |
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Tetty Johnson was ill during most of her time in London, and in 1752 she decided to return to the countryside while Johnson was busy working on his Dictionary. |
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These quotations and usages were all compared and carefully studied in the Dictionary so that a reader could understand what words in literary works meant in context. |
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We have no Dictionary of our Language, and scarce a tolerable Grammar. |
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The Preface to the Dictionary is available on Project Gutenberg. |
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The Random House College Dictionary defines DDT as an insecticide, a scabicide, and a pediculicide and says that it's also called by a 31-letter word. |
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Most of this article, including quotations unless otherwise noted, has been adapted from Stephen's entry on Edward Gibbon in the Dictionary of National Biography. |
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He and his brother Francis George Fowler composed The King's English, the Concise Oxford Dictionary and much of Modern English Usage on the island. |
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The Essential Dictionary contains over 45,000 headwords, phrases, and phrasal verbs, with 36,000 examples showing how words are used in a wide variety of situations. |
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In 2016, marking the centenary of Dahl's birth, Rennie compiled The Oxford Roald Dahl Dictionary which includes many of his invented words and their meaning. |
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Regardless, the phrase became a cultural phenomenon, adopted as the mantra for millions of girls and even making it into the Oxford English Dictionary. |
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Susan Butler, editor of Macquarie Dictionary, said that Word of the Year Committee selected the adjective because of its topicality and its visually graphic nature. |
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Postlewayt's Universal Dictionary, a contemporary source giving technological information in Europe, did not mention zinc before 1751 but the element was studied before then. |
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This was the first Webster's Dictionary with a Merriam imprint. |
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In 1998, Oxford University Press produced a Canadian English dictionary, after five years of lexicographical research, entitled The Oxford Canadian Dictionary. |
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The American Heritage Dictionary refuses to go further than Latin limes. |
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Random House dictionaries are now called Random House Webster's, and Microsoft's Encarta World English Dictionary is now Encarta Webster's Dictionary. |
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The dictionary's historical linguistics approach, illuminated by examples from primary source documents, makes it to German what the Oxford English Dictionary is to English. |
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The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, in the dictionary's 2014 Usage Ballot, addressed the topic of the pronunciations of Iran and Iraq. |
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A Cumbrian Dictionary of Dialect, Tradition and Folklore by William Rollinson exists, as well a more contemporary and lighthearted Cumbrian Dictionary and Phrase Book. |
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