Oxford Dictionary of English

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Image:NewOED-2001-ed.jpg
A copy of the 2001 issue of the NODE

The Oxford Dictionary of English (formerly The New Oxford Dictionary of English, often abbreviated to NODE) is a single-volume English language dictionary first published in 1998 by the Oxford University Press. This dictionary is not based on the Oxford English Dictionary and should not be mistaken for a new or updated version of the OED. It is a completely new dictionary which strives to represent as faithfully as possible the current usage of English words.

The latest edition contains 355,000 words, phrases and definitions, including biographical references. It is at present the largest single-volume English-language dictionary published by Oxford.

Contents

[edit] First edition

The first editor, Judy Pearsall, writes in the introduction that it is based on modern understanding of language, and derives from a corpus linguistics of contemporary used English. For example, the editors did not advocate against split infinitives, and instead justify their use in some contexts. A more unusual decision was to omit pronunciations for common, everyday words, contrary to the practice of most large dictionaries.[citation needed]

[edit] Reissues

There were several reissues of the New Oxford Dictionary of English, the first was in 1999, when it was published with thumbtabs, and subsequently, in 2001, when it was reissued with corrections and printed thumbtabs and contains over 2170 pages.

[edit] Second edition

In 2003, a second edition, named the Oxford Dictionary of English, was edited by Catherine Soanes and Angus Stevenson. A revised second edition was published in August 2005; it included a free subscription to an online edition of the dictionary. In Britain and many other English-speaking countries, electronic versions of the second edition are available for PDAs.

[edit] References

[edit] See also

[edit] External links


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