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Also known as: lexicon

Establishment of the word list

The goal of the big dictionaries is to make a complete inventory of a language, recording every word that can be found. The obsolete and archaic words must be included from the earlier stages of the language and even the words attested to only once (nonce words). In a language with a large literature, many “uncollected words” are likely to remain, lurking in out-of-the-way sources. The OED caught many personal coinages, but not head-over-heelishness (1882), odditude (1860), pigstyosity (1869), whitechokerism (1866), and other graceless jocularities. Also, the so-called latent words are a problem, when a lexicographer knows that a derivative word probably has been used, but he has no evidence for it. The first edition of the OED had three quotations for kindheartedness but none for kindheartedly, which any speaker of English would feel free to use. Some “ghost words” have arisen from the misreading of manuscripts and from misprints, and the lexicographer attempts to cast these out.

Various large blocks of words have a questionable status. Both geographic names and biographical entries are selectively included in some dictionaries but are really encyclopaedic. More than one million insects have been identified and named by entomologists, while names of chemical compounds and drugs may be as numerous. Trade names and proprietary names may number in the hundreds of thousands. Vogue suffixes such as -ism, -ology, -scope, or -wise are used by some with the freedom of a grammatical construction. These millions are beyond what any dictionary can be expected to include.

For the smaller-sized dictionaries, the editors attempt to choose the words that are likely to be looked up. They comb the scholarly works carefully and supplement them from files that they may have collected. They may decide to put derivative words at the end of entries as “run-ons” or to have all words strictly as separate alphabetical entries. A print dictionary’s size is ultimately decided by the commercial consideration of how much can be put into a work that can be sold for a reasonable price and held readily in the hand. (Bulk also influences the size of the word list for unabridged dictionaries.)

The establishment of a word list involves many difficult technical problems. Linguists tend to use the terms morpheme, free form, bound form, lexeme, and so on, inasmuch as word is a popular term not suited to technical use. A safe compromise is to use lexical unit. This term allows the inclusion of set phrases (established groups) and idioms. Words having different etymological sources must be considered as different words. Thus calf in the sense of the young of a bovine animal came from Common Germanic, whereas calf for the fleshy back of the lower part of the leg came from Old Norse, perhaps from a Celtic source. A more difficult problem is found when a word entered the language at different points—such as cookie, from the Dutch koekje (“little cake”), recorded in Scottish in 1701 in the form cuckie, then independently taken from the Dutch of New York’s Hudson River valley in the form cockie in 1703, and perhaps independently taken into South African English from Afrikaans in the mid-19th century.

Spelling

Dictionaries have probably played an important role in establishing the conventions of English spelling. Johnson has received much credit for this, though he differed very little from his predecessors. He used the spelling smoak in the early part of his dictionary, but when he came to the entry itself he changed it to smoke, and this has prevailed. Noah Webster introduced some simplifications that have become accepted in American English. American dictionaries usually label the distinctive British spellings, such as centre and its class, honour and its class, connexion, gaol, kerb, tyre, waggon, and a few others.

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The desire for uniformity is so great that popular variants are not welcomed; the very common alright is not yet entirely approved, nor is the widespread variant miniscule for minuscule. The OED is exceptional in listing the early variant spellings, showing that a common word like good has been spelled in more than a dozen different ways, with many more from Scottish usage. When the spelling reform movement was at its height, from the 1880s to c. 1910, the dictionaries included the new forms, but by the later 20th century those had been expunged. The graphic dress of the language is now so sacrosanct that dictionaries are used as authoritarian “style manuals” in matters of spelling, hyphenation, and syllabification.

Pronunciation

Dictionaries are more responsive to usage in the matter of pronunciation than they are in spelling. It is claimed that in the 19th century the Merriam-Webster dictionaries foisted a New England pronunciation on the United States, but by the mid-20th century many regional variations had been recorded. Webster’s Third New International went to surprising lengths in its variants; perhaps its record is in giving 132 different ways of pronouncing a fortiori.

The former practice of giving pronunciations as if the words were pronounced in isolation in a formal manner represented an artificiality that distorted language in use; dictionaries today mark pronunciation as it appears in continuous discourse. Furthermore, there has been a trend toward what has been called “democratization.” In the word government, for instance, it is recognized that many people do not pronounce an n, and some people actually say something like “gubb-munt.” There is a constant battle between traditional spoken forms and spelling pronunciations.

Since the alphabet is notoriously inadequate for recording the sounds of English, dictionaries are forced to adopt additional symbols. A system of using numerals over vowels was handed down from the 18th century, but that gave way to the diacritic markings of the Merriam-Webster series. The International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) has offered another possibility, but the general public finds it abstruse. Even more detailed symbols are needed in linguistic atlases and phonetic research. With considerable courage, Clarence L. Barnhart introduced the symbol schwa (ə) into The American College Dictionary (1947) for the neutral midcentral vowel, as at the beginning and end of America, and the symbol has now become widely accepted. Although some systems are clumsier than others, the key does not matter much if it is applied consistently.

Etymology

The supplying of etymologies involves such difficult decisions for a lexicographer as whether words should be carried back into prehistory by means of reconstructed forms or the degree to which speculation should be permitted. An American Romance scholar, Yakov Malkiel, presented the notion that words follow “trajectories”—by finding certain points in the history of a word, one can link up the developments in form and meaning. The austere treatment of some words consists in saying “derivation unknown,” and yet this sometimes causes interesting possibilities to be ignored.

A fundamental distinction is made in word history between the “native stock” and the “loanwords.” There have been so many borrowings into English that the language has been called “hypertrophied.” The traditional view is to regard the borrowings as a source of “richness.” A historical dictionary does its best to ascertain the date at which a word was adopted from another language, but the word may have to go through a period of probation. Murray, the editor of the OED, listed four stages of word “citizenship”: the casual, the alien, the denizen, and the natural. The casuals may not be part of the language, as they appear only in travel writings and accounts of foreign countries, but a lexicographer must collect citations for them in order to record the early history of a word that may later become naturalized. Some words may remain denizens for centuries, Murray pointed out, such as phenomenon treated as Greek, genus as Latin, and aide-de-camp as French. When a word is borrowed, its etymology may be traced through its descent in its original language.

Some early philosophies assumed that there is a mystic relation between the present use of a word and its origin and that etymology is a search for the “true meaning.” The recognition of continuous linguistic change establishes, however, that etymology is no more than early history, sometimes as reconstructed on the basis of relationships and known sound changes. Ingenuity in etymologizing is dangerous, and even plausibility can be misleading, but ascertained fact has overriding importance. It is curious that contemporary slang is often more uncertain in its origin than words of long history.

Grammatical information

Dictionaries are obliged to contain the two basic types of words of a language—the “function words” (those that perform the grammatical functions in a language, such as the articles, pronouns, prepositions, and conjunctions) and the “referential words” (those that symbolize entities outside the language system). Each type must be treated in a suitable way. Dictionaries have been much criticized for not including a sufficiency of grammatical information. It is usual to mark the part of speech, but not the categories of mass noun and count noun. (A mass noun, such as milk or oxygen, cannot ordinarily be used in the plural, while a count noun is any noun that can be pluralized.) Such information is given in some dictionaries designed for teaching, and the technique could well be adopted more generally. The irregular inflections must be given, showing that one says goose, geese, but not moose, meese. Or in the verbs, one says walk, walked, but ride, rode. It is usual to treat the different parts of speech as separate lexical entries, as in “to walk” and “to take a walk,” requiring a parallel list of senses, but Thorndike, in his school dictionaries, experimented with grouping the parts of speech together when they had a similar sense.

The relation of grammar to the vocabulary is the subject of considerable controversy among linguists. If one considers the analysis of language as one unified enterprise, then the grammar is central and the lexical units are inserted at some point in the analysis. Another view is that the division is into coordinate branches, such as phonology, syntax, and lexicon. Certainly lexicographers try to take advantage of all findings made by grammarians.

Sense division and definition

A language like English has so many complex developments in the senses—i.e., the particular meanings—of its words that the task of the lexicographer is difficult. It is generally accepted that “meaning” is a suffusing characteristic of all language by definition, and the attempt to slice meaning into “senses” must be done arbitrarily by the person analyzing the language. This is where collected contexts form the basis of the lexicographer’s judgment. The lexicographer sorts the quotations into piles on the basis of similarities and differences and may have to discard “transitional” examples. Figurative developments, such as the mouth of a river or the foot of a hill, make complications in the relationships.

For the order in which the senses of words are given, the order of historical development has been chiefly used. For an old word like earth, the information may be insufficient. The editors of the OED had to give up, because, they said, “men’s notions of the shape and position of the earth have so greatly changed since Old Teutonic times”; they were obliged to compromise with a logical order. Sometimes, but not always, a word seems to have a “core,” or central, meaning from which other meanings develop. If the historical order is followed, the obsolete and archaic meanings may have to appear first. Therefore, some popular dictionaries give the most important meaning first and work down to the rare and occasional meanings at the end. The so-called “semantic count,” giving senses in order of frequency, has also been used.

There seems to be no one method that is best for defining all words. The lexicographer must use artistry in selecting the ways that will convey a sense accurately and succinctly. The lexicographer attempts to find what is “criterial” in a particular meaning but can also give further detail until an entry runs into the area of the encyclopaedic.

In logical theory it would be ideal to have a “metalanguage” in which definitions could be stated, but nothing of the sort is available for popular use. A “defining vocabulary” can be established, and in school dictionaries the definitions use simple words. In the last analysis all definitions have to fall back on undefined terms (to be accepted like axioms) that symbolize first-order experience of life. In this connection the logician Willard Van Orman Quine argued that lexicography is basically concerned with synonymy.

Usage labels

Part of the information that a dictionary should give concerns the restrictions and constraints on the use of words, commonly called usage labelling. There is great variation in language use in many dimensions—temporal, geographical, and cultural. The people who make a two-part division into “correct” and “incorrect” show that they do not understand how language works. The valuation does not lie in the word itself but in the appropriateness of the context. Therefore, it is preferable to be sparing in the use of labels and to allow the tone to become apparent from the illustrative examples. An important distinction was put forward in 1948 by an American philologist, John S. Kenyon, when he discriminated between “cultural levels,” which refer to the degree of education and cultivation of a person, and “functional varieties,” which refer to the styles of speech suitable to particular situations. Thus, a cultivated person rightly uses informal or colloquial language when at ease with friends.

A lexicographer is faced with the difficult task of selecting a suitable set of labels. In the temporal categories, labels such as obsolete, obsolescent, archaic, and old-fashioned are dangerous because some speakers have long memories and might use old words very naturally. National labels are problematical because words move easily from one branch of the language to another. The word blizzard, for instance, is no doubt an Americanism in origin, but since the 1880s it has been so well known over the English-speaking world that a national label would be misleading. The label dialect or regional, either for England or America, offers many problems, for alleged “boundaries” are permeable. The label colloquial was much misunderstood, and now informal is often used in its place. There may be a “poetic vocabulary” that needs labeling, and few people will agree on any definition of slang.

It is revealing that under the word cockeyed, marked slang, in early printings of the Merriam-Webster Third New International, one of the quotations is by the careful stylist Jacques Barzun; in order to use effective English, this cultivated writer is willing to draw upon slang. Some would argue that, in marking the use as slang, the Merriam-Webster staff was not sufficiently “permissive.”

Some dictionaries wisely include special paragraphs on the constraints of usage, sometimes as a “synonymy” and sometimes as a “usage note.”

Illustrative quotations

Dictionaries of the past have copied shamelessly from one to another, but the collecting of a file of illustrative quotations makes possible a fresh, original treatment. Scholarly works such as the OED and its supplements follow the canon of always using the earliest quotation and the latest for an obsolete word; in between, the quotations are selected for revealing facets of usage or for “forcing” a meaning. The criterion of use by only the best writers does not hold for a truly historical dictionary, because a “low” source may be especially revealing. The giving of exact source citations is not a matter of pedantry but establishes the scientific basis by which others can check the evidence. A different set of quotations, accurately attested, might have led to a different treatment. Thus, the phrase illustrative quotation is something of a misnomer, for the quotations are more than illustrative; they form the basic evidence from which conclusions are drawn. It is the work of the editor to decide when the collections are sufficient—ripe, as it were—to move from the collecting stage to the editing stage.

A small-sized dictionary may advantageously use made-up sentences, because an aptly framed “forcing” context can tell more than a definition. In fact, the habitual collocations of a word (the surrounding words with which it usually appears) may be revealing of the nature of a word, and during the second half of the 20th century the compilation of “dictionaries of collocations” represented a new direction in lexicography.

Technological aids

The development of machine aids, such as the computer, during the 20th century was heralded by some as ushering in a new era in lexicography. Although a computer can do well in many tasks of great drudgery that are involved in building a dictionary—mechanical excerpting of texts, alphabetizing, and classifying by designated descriptors—it is limited to what a human being tells it to do. It is difficult for a computer to sort out homographs (i.e., separate words that are spelled alike); at the editing stage, the delicate decisions must be humanly made. A computer can be used to good advantage in the compilation of concordances of individual authors or of limited texts, and then one type of dictionary could be made by a summation of concordances. Such a procedure, with a large body of literature such as that of the Renaissance, is especially advantageous because an editor would be overwhelmed working alone without any technological assistance.

Attitudes of society

Without a doubt, dictionaries have been a conservative force for many hundreds of years, not only in countries that have had an official academy that has the national language as part of its province but also in the English-speaking countries, in which academies have been spurned. Well-entrenched popular attitudes account for this. A Neoplatonic outlook assumes that there exists an ideal form of language from which faltering human beings have departed and that dictionaries might bring people closer to the perfect language. Also, there is a widespread “yearning for certainty,” a seeking for guidance amid the wilderness of possible forms. Thus, people welcome self-proclaimed “supreme authorities.”

Americans have had additional reasons for their homage to the dictionary. In colonial times Americans felt themselves to be far from the centre of civilization and were willing to accept a book standard in order to learn what they thought prevailed in England. This linguistic colonialism lasted a long time and set the pattern of accepting the dictionary as law. In 1869 the scholar Richard Grant White declared: “Upon the proper spelling, pronunciation, etymology, and definition of words, a dictionary might be made to which high and almost absolute authority might justly be awarded.” In this vein teachers have taken pains to inculcate “the dictionary habit” in their pupils. Rather than observe the language around them, Americans encouraged in this habit tend to fly to a dictionary to settle questions on language. This call for dogmatic prescription has been a source of uneasiness to lexicographers, most of whom now argue that all they can do legitimately is describe how the language has been used.

Social attitudes have affected the dictionaries also in the enforcement of certain taboos. Certain words commonly called obscene have been omitted, and, thus, irrational taboos have been strengthened. A perennial problem in lexicography is the treatment of the terms of ethnic insult. There is constant social pressure for leaving them out, and some dictionaries have succumbed to it, but it may be that an enlightened attitude shows that the open discussion of prejudices is the best way of getting rid of them.

The greatest value of a dictionary is in giving access to the full resources of a language and as a source of information that will enhance free enjoyment of the mother tongue.