Middle English Dictionary

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major reference

  • Nathan Bailey's definition of “oats”
    In dictionary: Scholarly dictionaries

    A Middle English Dictionary, covering the period 1100 to 1475, was completed in 2001, with an overwhelming fullness of detail. For the period 1475 to 1700, an Early Modern English Dictionary did not fare as well. It got under way in 1928 at the University of…

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Quick Facts
Born:
Dec. 13, 1891, Villach, Austria
Died:
Jan. 2, 1992, Ann Arbor, Mich., U.S. (aged 100)

Hans Kurath (born Dec. 13, 1891, Villach, Austria—died Jan. 2, 1992, Ann Arbor, Mich., U.S.) was an American linguist, best known as the chief editor of the Linguistic Atlas of New England, the first comprehensive linguistic atlas of a large region.

Kurath emigrated from Austria to the United States in 1907 and became a citizen in 1912. He studied at the University of Texas (A.B., 1914) and the University of Chicago (Ph.D., 1920). He taught German at Northwestern University (Evanston, Ill.; 1920–27), German and linguistics at Ohio State University (Columbus; 1927–31) and at Brown University (Providence, R.I.; 1931–46), and English and linguistics at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor (1946–62). His wife was the noted ethnomusicologist Gertrude Prokosch Kurath.

Kurath’s career centred mainly on American English dialects. In addition to having edited the Linguistic Atlas of New England, 3 vol. (1939–43), he wrote the Handbook of the Linguistic Geography of New England (1939, rev. ed. 1973), A Word Geography of the Eastern United States (1949), and The Pronunciation of English in the Atlantic States (1961). From 1946 to 1962 he was also editor in chief of the Middle English Dictionary.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.