« January/February Word Fugitive | Main | Hinky! » The uncertain future of dictionaries12 Jan 2009 05:16 pm To me, the future of the dictionary industry doesn't look much brighter than the future of the American auto industry. To be sure, people learning a language will continue to need dictionaries. And specialized dictionaries will remain useful. The Oxford English Dictionary, for a case in point, lays out the entire history of English before our eyes; it's a cultural treasure. (If, however, it were required to make money for its owners -- as most dictionaries now are -- not even the first volume of the first edition would have made it into print.) In a recent thread, Jesse Sheidlower and I began discussing dictionaries and what they're good for. Jesse is editor at large at the Oxford English Dictionary, and as you might imagine, he considers dictionaries invaluable. My job includes fielding regular people's questions about language, so I'm constantly discovering new things that people wish dictionaries did, but they don't. I don't mean to suggest that lexicographers are particularly lazy or sloppy. But it seems to me that they invest a lot of hard work in things users don't need or want. More after the jump. (1) To rule on whether or not a given word exists, (2) To tell them how to spell, pronounce, and use words in the standard, appropriate-to-use-during-a-job-interview way, (3) And to clear up obscure points about certain words. For different but definite reasons, though, the guidance dictionaries give people on any of these points is unreliable. I'll be glad to explain why I say this -- at least, I will be glad to if anyone asks politely. What's more, I'm willing to admit that my complaint is unfair -- as if I were complaining about my car that it can't fly. It wasn't designed to fly! The difference is that most people don't buy a car expecting that it can fly -- or imagine that the car is flying when it isn't. What dictionaries are really good at is describing established words with one spelling, one pronunciation, relatively few meanings, and no level-of-language issues (as in, for instance, are people likely to find it offensive?). But that's not what people who use dictionaries usually want to know. So now that -- as I said in the earlier thread and Jesse seconded -- all of us Internet users can find out for ourselves much of what we do want to know, dictionaries' days may be numbered.
Comments (9)
Here's what I have so far for physical, unabridged dictionaries: • keeping windows and doors propped open
My 14 year old daughter's favorite Christmas gift was an American Heritage Collegiate Dictionary.
Hinky...I have a two-year running dispute with my brother about the existence of the word 'hinky.' I had used it in a sentence, "Well, my car's brakes are feeling a little hinky." He did not believe in the word, so I bought him an unabridged dictionary, I believe American Heritage or some such, and hinky was not in there, but then I found a different one, Oxford maybe, and there was the word. Brian Clark
In response to Brian Clark's report on the word "hinky," it was, oddly enough, the OED's word of the day yesteday, Jan 12. (One can subscribe to the service and a word and with its origins and definition is mailed daily to your homepage.) I had been unsure of the word "hinky" for many years and was glad for its clarification. I am feeling much less hinky about the word now. Brian used it correctly. Good word.
I think the market for cheap dictionaries will decline. But the market for beautiful leatherbound dictionaries with etomologies will flourish. Less a tool (that's what online dictionaries are for), and more of an indulgence.
How I may find larger info?
I did not believe, that it can be true..
It was very interesting =)
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I read your article just after I looked up a word in the dictionary to get a clearer understanding of a sentence in another article. While the format and source will change, the need for dictionaries will continue. There are so many words in our language, we can't possibly know the meaning of everything we hear or read.
Posted by Karen Curry | January 12, 2009 8:31 PM