Dictionaries
This second edition of Sidney I. Landau's landmark work offers a comprehensive and completely up-to-date description of how dictionaries are researched and written, with particular attention to the ways in which computer technology has changed modern lexicography. Landau has an insider's practical knowledge of making dictionaries and every feature of the dictionary is examined and explained. Written in a readable style, free of jargon and unnecessary technical language, it will appeal to readers with no specialist knowledge of the field, as well as to professional lexicographers.
- Comprehensive and completely up-to-date description of how dictionaries are researched and written
- Particular attention to the ways in which computer technology has changed modern lexicography
- Written by an author who has an insider's practical knowledge of making dictionaries
Reviews & endorsements
"No other introduction to lexicography outshines the limpid style of Dictionaries or the rich balance of its contents." Journal of the Dictionary Society of America
"Here is a new thing under the sun: a virtually exhaustive treatment of lexicography...should be required reading for all lexicographers and can be heartily recommended to everyone else who cares to know what dictionaries are like and how to use them to best advantage." The Times Literary Supplement
Product details
April 2001Paperback
9780521785129
496 pages
230 × 155 × 31 mm
0.72kg
4 b/w illus. 3 maps 5 tables
Available
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- 1. What is a dictionary?
- 2. A brief history of lexicography
- 3. Key elements of dictionaries and other language references
- 4. Definition
- 5. Usage
- 6. The corpus in lexicography
- 7. Dictionary making
- 8. Legal and ethical issues
- Bibliography and index to dictionaries mentioned in the text, from Johnson (1755) to the present
- A selective bibliography of nondictionary sources.