Volume I: General-purpose Dictionaries
1: A. P. Cowie: Introduction
Part I. Early Glossaries; Bilingual, and Multilingual
Dictionaries
2: Hans Sauer: Glosses, Glossaries, and Dictionaries in the
Medieval Period
3: Janet Bately: Bilingual and Multilingual Dictionaries of the
Renaissance and Early Seventeenth Century
4: Monique Cormier: Bilingual Dictionaries of the Late Seventeeth
and Eighteenth Centuries
5: Carla Marello: Bilingual Dictionaries of the Nineteenth to the
Twentieth Centuries
6: Donna Farina and George Durman: Bilingual Dictionaries of
English and Russian in the Eighteenth to the Twentieth
Centuries
Part 2. The History of English Monolingual Dictionaries
7: Noel Osselton: The Early Development of the English Monolingual
Dictionary Seventeenth and Early Eighteenthth Centuries
8: Allen Reddick: Johnson and Richardson
9: Sidney Landau: Major American Dictionaries
10: Lynda Mugglestone: The Oxford English Dictionary
11: Charlotte Brewer: The OED Supplements
12: Richard Bailey: National and Regional Dictionaries of
English
13: Margaret Dareau and Iseabail Macleod: Dictionaries of Scots
14: Michael Adams: The Period Dictionaries
15: Jeannette Allsopp: Dictionaries of Caribbean English
16: Edmund Weiner: The Electronic OED: the computerization of a
historical dictionary
References
Index of Names
Index of Subjects
Volume II: Specialized Dictionaries
Part 1. Dictionaries Specialized According to Ordering of Entries,
Topical or Linguistic Content, or Speech Community
1: Werner Hüllen: Dictionaries of Synonyms and Thesauri
2: Michael Hoare: Scientific and Technical Dictionaries
3: Carole Hough: Dictionaries of Place-names
4: Patrick Hanks: Dictionaries of Personal Names
5: Joan Beal: Pronouncing Dictionaries - i Eighteenth and Early
Nineteenth Centuries
6: Beverley Collins and Inger Mees: Pronouncing Dictionaries - ii
Mid to Late-Nineteenth Century
7: Thomas Herbst and Michael Klotz: Syntagmatic and Phraseological
Dictionaries
8: Elizabeth Knowles: Dictionaries of Quotations
9: Anatoly Liberman: English Etymological Dictionaries
10: Robert Penhallurick: Dialect Dictionaries
11: Julie Coleman: Slang and Cant Dictionaries
Part 2. Dictionaries Specialized According to Uses and Users
12: Robert Allen: Dictionaries of Usage
13: Sidney Landau: The American Collegiate Dictionaries
14: A. P. Cowie: The Earliest Foreign Learners' Dictionaries
15: Thierry Fontenelle: Linguistic Research and Learner's
Dictionaries: The Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
16: Rosamund Moon: The Cobuild Project
17: Hilary Nesi: Dictionaries in Electronic Form
References
Index of Names
Index of Subjects
A. P. Cowie is Honorary Reader in Lexicography at the University of
Leeds. He was co-editor of the third edition of the Oxford Advanced
Learner's Dictionary and chief editor of the fourth edition. He is
the co-editor of the Oxford Dictionary of English Idioms and was
editor of the International Journal of Lexicography from 1998 to
2003. His books include English Dictionaries for Foreign Learners:
A History (OUP, 1999) and, as
editor, Phraseology: Theory, Analysis, and Applications (OUP,
1998). He is currently preparing the second edition of the Oxford
Dictionary of English Idioms by A. P. Cowie, R. Mackin, and I. R.
McCaig.
offers the most comprehensive treatment to date of the development
of English lexicography from the Middle Ages to the present... OHEL
has already earned its place in the lexicographic canon. These
splendid two volumes will no doubt be cherished by generations of
IJL readers.
*Areleta Adamska-Salaciak, International Journal of
Lexicography*
my favourite book of this year, The Oxford History of English
Lexicography. The essays in these two large volumes include pieces
on the evolution of specialized dictionaries of science, technology
and medicine.
*W. F. Bynum, Personal favourites of 2009, Nature*
...invaluable, for its well-chosen team of specialists have brought
together more historical points of detail than ever before
*David Crystal, Times Literary Supplement*
It is safe to say that any future work on English lexicography will
begin here, that anyone interested in how lexicography impinges on
specific historical issues will consult here, and that any speaker
interested in the quixotic project of defining the undefinable -
English - will linger here.
*Tim William Machan, Marquette University, Milwaukee, writing for
Journal of English Linguistics*
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