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Explore the historical development of English and American lexicography, types of dictionaries, main problems faced, and the evolution of key dictionaries. Learn the nuances of metalanguage and the challenges in compiling dictionaries.
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Historical development of Lexicography as a linguistic science • Some debatable problems of lexicography • Types of Dictionaries
Lexicography • is the theory and practice of compiling dictionaries • a branch of applied linguistics
Dictionary • a book listing words of a language with their meanings and often with data regarding pronunciation, usage and/or origin
Metalanguage • a language used to make statements about other languages. • it can refer to any terminology or language used to discuss language itself - a written grammar, for example, or a discussion about language use.
Historical development of English lexicography • Old English period – glosses of religious books with translation from Latin • the 15th century – regular bilingual English-Latin dictionaries
Historical development of English lexicography • 1604 – “A Table Alphabeticall, containing and teaching the true writing and understanding of hard usuall English words borrowed from the Hebrew, Greeke, Latine, and French” • first unilingual dictionary explaining 3000 words by English equivalents (Robert Cawdrey)
Historical development of English lexicography • 1721 – “Universal Etymological Dictionary” • first etymological dictionary, explained etymology of words and included pronunciation (Nathaniel Bailey)
Historical development of English lexicography • 1775 – explanatory dictionary by Dr Samuel Johnson • words were illustrated by examples from English literature • pronunciation was not included • helped to preserve the English spelling in its conservative form
Historical development of English lexicography • 1780 – first pronouncing dictionary (Thomas Sheridan) • 1791 – “The Critical Pronouncing Dictionary and Expositor of the English Language” (John Walker)
Historical development of English lexicography • 1858-1928 – New English Dictionary (NED), 12 volumes, included all words existing in the language • 1933 – Oxford English Dictionary (OED), 13 volumes • includes spellings, pronunciations, detailed etymologies, quotations
Historical development of English lexicography • “A Shorter Oxford Dictionary”, 2 volumes, smaller number of quotations • 1911 – “The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Current English”, contained only word of current usage, no quotations
Historical development of English lexicography • “English Dialect Dictionary” by Joseph Wright
Historical development of American lexicography • 1798 – “A School Dictionary” (Samuel Johnson Jr.) • 1828 – “American Dictionary of the English Language” (Noah Webster) • attempts to simplify the spelling and pronunciation • provides definitions, etymology, explanations about things named
Historical development of American lexicography • 1891 - “Century Dictionary” • 1895 – “Funk and Wagnalls New Standard Dictionary” • 1967 – “Random House Dictionary of the English Language”
Main Problems of Lexicography • number of dictionary entries • selection of head words • arrangement and contents of the vocabulary entry • definitions in a unilingual dictionary
Number of dictionary entries and selection of head words • phraseological units (e.g. It is the early bird that catches the worm, at length) • homonyms (e.g. to work – work) • occasional or nonce words (e.g. footballer)
Arrangement of the vocabulary entry • sequence of meanings of a polysemantic word
Contents of the vocabulary entries • distribution of a word: part of speech, grammatical peculiarities, syntactical distribution • stylistical reference and emotive colouring
Definitions in a unilingual dictionary • synonyms • linguistic definitions – concerned with words as speech material (lexical data) – British dictionaries • encyclopedic definitions – concerned with things for which the words are names (realia) – American dictionaries • examples (context)
Types of English Dictionaries • Encyclopedic – thing-books dealing with concepts (objects and phenomena, their origin and development, etc.) • e.g. influenza – causes, symptoms, treatments and remedies, etc.
Types of English Dictionaries • Linguistic – word-books dealing with vocabulary units (semantic structure, usage, etc.) • e.g. influenza – spelling, pronunciation, grammar characteristics, derivatives, synonyms, etc.
General Dictionaries • present a wide range of data about the vocabulary items in ordinary use • Webster’s New International Dictionary, The Concise Oxford Dictionary of the Current English
Explanatory (Unilingual) Dictionary • spelling and pronunciation • grammatical characteristics (part of speech, (in)transitivity, irregular forms) • meanings (extended definitions or synonyms)
Explanatory (Unilingual) Dictionary • illustrative examples (citations from literary sources, sentences invented by compilers) • derivatives (grouped in one entry or in separate) • phraseology, etymology, synonyms and antonyms
Translation (Bilingual) Dictionary • contain vocabulary items in one language and their equivalents in another language • main problem – to ensure adequate translation
Special Dictionaries • cover only a specific part of the vocabulary (synonyms, antonyms, phraseology, neologisms, terms, etc.) • provide information limited to one particular aspect (collocability, word-frequency, etymology, pronunciation, etc.)
Dictionaries of Synonyms • A Dictionary of English Synonyms and Synonymous Expressions (R. Soule) • Webster’s Dictionary of Synonyms
Phraseological Dictionaries • The Oxford Dictionary of English Proverbs • Book of English Idioms (V.H. Collins) • An Anglo-Russian Phraseological Dictionary (A.V. Koonin)
Ideological Dictionary • words are arranged not alphabetically • words are grouped according to their semantic fields • designed for English-speaking writes, translators • Thesaurus of English Words and Phrases (P.M. Roget)