Thursday, April 03, 2008

More things change

I used the Oxford English Dictionary just this week to look up April Fool! Serendipity led this e-mail from Art Lowe at OED (through Karen Monton at GALILEO) to arrive with the suggestion that one take a quick look at the description of the major changes that are taking place. Vendors must have the Spring cleaning urge too!

*MAJOR CHANGE IN CHOICE OF REVISED WORDS PUBLISHED ONLINE! * .

The sequence of revised entries published online since March 2000 has proceeded from the letter "M" to "quit shilling" (representing between a fifth and a quarter of the dictionary). According to that model, the present publication batch would include words from "quits" to somewhere early in the letter "R".
But after several years of steady alphabetical publication, editors of the OED have decided a change was necessary. The latest update departs radically from the former model, in that its 2,116 entries consist for the most part of key English words from across the alphabet, along with the other words which make up the alphabetical cluster surrounding them.

From now on, the editors will alternate between these two models each quarter, with the next publication range (in June 2008) continuing from /quits/, and the subsequent one (September 2008) presenting a further range of major words and their associated alphabetical clusters.

The main purpose of this change is to revise, much earlier than would otherwise have been the case, important English words whose meanings or application have developed most over the past century. Some of these key words are, as one might expect, among those often looked up by readers of the OED.

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