English Lexicography

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English Lexicography

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English Lexicography. 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. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of English Lexicography

Page 1: English Lexicography

English Lexicography

English Lexicography

Page 2: English Lexicography

•Historical development of Lexicography as a linguistic science

•Some debatable problems of lexicography

•Types of Dictionaries

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Lexicography•is the theory and practice

of compiling dictionaries•a branch of applied

linguistics

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Dictionary• a book listing words of a language

with their meanings and often with data regarding pronunciation, usage and/or origin

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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.

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Historical development of

English lexicography• Old English period – glosses of

religious books with translation from Latin

• the 15th century – regular bilingual English-Latin dictionaries

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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)

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Historical development of

English lexicography• 1721 – “Universal Etymological

Dictionary”• first etymological dictionary,

explained etymology of words and included pronunciation (Nathaniel Bailey)

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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

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Historical development of

English lexicography• 1780 – first pronouncing

dictionary (Thomas Sheridan)• 1791 – “The Critical Pronouncing

Dictionary and Expositor of the English Language” (John Walker)

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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

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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

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Historical development of

English lexicography• “English Dialect Dictionary” by

Joseph Wright

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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

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Historical development of American lexicography

• 1891 - “Century Dictionary”• 1895 – “Funk and Wagnalls New

Standard Dictionary”• 1967 – “Random House Dictionary

of the English Language”

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Main Problems of Lexicography

• number of dictionary entries• selection of head words• arrangement and contents of the

vocabulary entry• definitions in a unilingual

dictionary

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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)

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Arrangement of the vocabulary entry

• sequence of meanings of a polysemantic word

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Contents of the vocabulary entries

• distribution of a word: part of speech, grammatical peculiarities, syntactical distribution

• stylistical reference and emotive colouring

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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)

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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.

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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.

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Types of Linguistic Dictionaries

linguistic dictionarieslinguistic

dictionariesgeneralgeneral specializedspecialized

explanatoryexplanatory

parallel,or translation

parallel,or translation

synonyms andantonyms

synonyms andantonyms

collocationscollocations

phraseologicalphraseological

slangslang

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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

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Explanatory (Unilingual) Dictionary

• spelling and pronunciation• grammatical characteristics (part

of speech, (in)transitivity, irregular forms)

• meanings (extended definitions or synonyms)

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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

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Translation (Bilingual) Dictionary

• contain vocabulary items in one language and their equivalents in another language

• main problem – to ensure adequate translation

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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.)

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Dictionaries of Synonyms

• A Dictionary of English Synonyms and Synonymous Expressions (R. Soule)

• Webster’s Dictionary of Synonyms

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Phraseological Dictionaries

• The Oxford Dictionary of English Proverbs

• Book of English Idioms (V.H. Collins)

• An Anglo-Russian Phraseological Dictionary (A.V. Koonin)

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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)