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El. knyga: Cambridge Handbook of the Dictionary

Edited by (Indiana University, Bloomington), Edited by (University of Southern California)

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There is no such thing as 'the dictionary'. Rather, there are innumerable kinds of dictionaries that respond to their authors' aspirations and their users' needs. In each case, the negotiation among a dictionary's material, its authors, and its readers tells a rich cultural story. Bringing together cutting-edge research from an international team of experts, this interdisciplinary Handbook provides an all-encompassing account of dictionaries in context. Organized into five thematic parts, its chapters cover a multitude of topics such as types of dictionaries, the place of dictionaries in intellectual, cultural and book history, and dictionaries as material objects, as well as their visual design. It also explores the role of dictionaries in a select group of special fields where words especially matter (for instance, law), the business contexts in which dictionaries are made, and finally the future of dictionaries. There is no fuller or more compelling overview of dictionaries available today.

Bringing together cutting-edge research from a team of experts, this Handbook provides an all-encompassing account of dictionaries in context. It considers the cultural, social, intellectual and book history of dictionaries, as well as why they are made, and how they are edited, designed and published.

Recenzijos

'An instructive, inspiring, innovative volume about dictionaries and why we need and use them, how we design, produce and sell them, and how they reflect their times in short: a must-read for anyone interested in their past, present, and even future forms.' Annette Klosa-Kückelhaus, Head of Lexicography Area, Leibniz Institute for the German Language, Mannheim 'This Handbook stands out for its strikingly original take on the world of dictionaries. The range and diversity of the topics it covers - many of them barely addressed until now - makes this an enjoyable and incredibly interesting read. The book's prevailing tone - fairly informal, and very approachable - belies the real scholarhip that underpins every chapter.' Michael Rundell, Chief Lexicographic Officer, Lexical Computing 'What a vast compendium! In addition to expectable chapters on the history, structure, progress, and prospects of dictionaries, this collection of essays by top-notch lexicographers brings us delightfully unexpected tidbits as well: looking backward, we learn why the 4th edition of Black's Law Dictionary includes an entry for Boston cream pie; looking forward, we envision a time when putting a dictionary next to an exotic restaurant dish will have it pick up aromas and tell us what herbs and spices are contained!' Joan Houston Hall, Chief Editor Emerita, Dictionary of American Regional English

Daugiau informacijos

Bringing together cutting-edge research, this Handbook provides a complete guide to how dictionaries are, and have been, created and used.
Acknowledgments; Introduction Michael Adams and Edward Finegan; Part I.
Types of Dictionaries:
1. Dictionary typologies Michael Adams;
2. Historical
and other specialized dictionaries Ammon Shea;
3. Thesauri Kate Wild;
4.
Commercial dictionaries Orin Hargraves;
5. Bilingual dictionaries Carla
Marello;
6. Learner's dictionaries Shigeru Yamada and Hai Xu;
7. Children's
dictionaries Susan Rennie;
8. Dictionaries of quotations and dictionaries of
proverbs Elizabeth Knowles; Part II. Dictionary as Book:
9. Dictionary
typography Michael Adams;
10. Illustrations in dictionaries Michael Hancher;
11. Page and book design in dictionaries Wendalyn Nichols;
12. Dictionaries
in book history John Considine;
13. Dictionaries as material objects Lindsay
Rose Russell; Part III. Dictionaries and Ideology:
14. Dictionaries, language
ideologies, and language attitudes David West Brown;
15. Dictionaries and
cultural politics Lindsay Rose Russell;
16. Usage in dictionaries and
dictionaries of usage Don Chapman;
17. Dictionaries and language contact
Jason F. Siegel;
18. Dictionaries in religious history and biblical
interpretation William A. Ross;
19. Attitudes toward 'the dictionary; Edward
Finegan; Part IV. Dictionaries and Domains of Use:
20. Dictionary audiences
Katherine Connor Martin;
21. Dictionaries and intellectual history John
Considine;
22. Dictionaries and social history Carol Percy;
23. Linguistics
and philology in dictionaries Anatoly Liberman;
24. Dictionaries as literary
artifacts Ilan Stavans;
25. Dictionaries and editors Jonathon Owen;
26.
Lexicography and the law Bryan A. Garner; Part V. The Business of
Dictionaries:
27. Organizing dictionary projects Cathal Convery;
28. Editing
dictionaries Joseph P. Pickett;
29. Publishing the dictionary: the business
side of the business John Morse;
30. Legal and ethical issues in
dictionary-making Michael Adams; Part VI. The future of Dictionaries:
31. The
future of dictionaries Gilles-Maurice de Schryver.
Edward Finegan is Professor Emeritus of Linguistics and Law at the University of Southern California. He served as President of the Dictionary Society of North America and of the International Association of Forensic Linguists. He has published widely on dictionaries and attitudes toward dictionaries. Michael Adams is Provost Professor in the Department of English at Indiana University at Bloomington. He has contributed to the Middle English Dictionary, the American Heritage Dictionaries, and the Barnhart Dictionary Companion and served as editor of the journals Dictionaries and American Speech. He is a Fellow of the Dictionary Society of North America.