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Lexicography
(redirected from lexicographically)

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lexicography, the applied study of the meaning, evolution, and function of the vocabulary units of a language for the purpose of compilation in book form—in short, the process of dictionary making. Early lexicography, practiced from the 7th cent. B.C. in Mesopotamia, Greece, and Rome, was reserved for abstruse words of specific disciplines. General lexicography originated in the 16th cent., and aspects of the modern dictionary dictionary, published list, in alphabetical order, of the words of a language. In monolingual dictionaries the words are explained and defined in the same language; in bilingual dictionaries they are translated into another language.
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, such as etymology, developed during the 17th and 18th cent.
Lexicography
Johnson, Samuel
(1709–1784) literary scholar, creator of first comprehensive lexicographical work of English. [Br. Hist.: EB, V: 591]
Murray, James
(1837–1915) renowned editor of the Oxford English Dictionary. [Br. Hist.: Caught in the Web of Words]
Oxford English Dictionary
(OED) great multi-volume historical dictionary of English. [Br. Hist.: Caught in the Web of Words]
Webster, Noah
(1758–1843) philologist and compiler of popular comprehensive American dictionary. [Am. Hist.: Hart, 902]
“Webster’s”
now used generically, synonymous in U.S. with authoritativeness in a dictionary. [Am. Cult.: Misc.]


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Just when I began to fear that I might, in Margaret Thatcher's phrase, "go wobbly" on Quayle, the lexicographically challenged former vice president obligingly rehashed the "potatoe" episode.
 
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