meaningofeverything.jpg (46862 bytes)  The Meaning of Everything, Simon Winchester (Oxford University Press, 2003)

If you love words, history, travel, people, or have ever wondered how a dictionary is made, this book is a wonderful read. Simon Winchester is well known for his best seller, The Professor and the Madman, a fascinating tale of madness and genius, and the incredible obsessions of two unusual men who contributed so much to the making of the Oxford English Dictionary (OED). The Meaning of Everything is a much broader and complete story of the 71 years it took to complete the OED, though equally fascinating.

The book begins with a brief history of the English language, a chapter that alone justifies reading the book. The origin of words and how meanings and spellings have changed is a lesson in history and geography and social anthropology, all in one. The contributions of the various settlers and sometimes conquerors of the British Isles is mind-boggling, not to mention the impact of travel and technology. English has no single origin, no pure form, and it changes incessantly, more than any other language on the planet. No wonder that immigrants have always found it difficult, despite the familiarity of a certain few words from their own language. Learn Latin and you’ll find that Italian and Spanish are not so far removed. But what do you study as a prelude to English? Don’t even try.

And how does one assemble a dictionary? Who actually does it? Who pays for it and who will publish it? Who will buy it? The answers vary, depending on whose dictionary you mean. There were dozens of dictionaries produced in England alone before the OED and Winchester discusses their pros and cons. But mostly this book is about the unusual and fascinating people who persevered in producing what is today considered the greatest dictionary of the English language, The Oxford English Dictionary.

The sources of words for any dictionary, of course, are primarily other dictionaries, letters, conversations and literature, including newspapers, novels and even scientific journals. But who would undertake the Herculean task of gathering and reading ALL of this material in order to produce a truly COMPLETE dictionary of English? Inspired members of the Philological Society (philology; the love of learning or words) in 1857 England, who else! With the help of thousands of volunteers from around the world, but mostly from the English speaking countries of the British Isles, Australia, Canada and the United States.

A standard method of submitting words was adopted and a small staff, mostly volunteers and the rest poorly paid, working in what was described as a glorified shed, began the grueling task of sorting and cross-checking and organizing the submissions, one word per card. These were filed in a system of pigeonholes, which continued to grow and evolve as the project stretched from the original estimate of ten years to over seventy years. Many of the volunteers and staff did not live to see the fruition of their efforts. Along the way, efforts to find a publisher willing to fund the printing and fights with editors who wanted to trim back the project continued, complicated by the expected professional jealousies and political infighting to be found among University board members and their advisors.

Even before its completion, the dictionary began to be published serially, over a period of years, until its completion in 1928. Can you imagine people dashing to the nearest newsstand when it was announced that the next volume, a slim 64-page paperback, perhaps containing the words from whiskey to willfulness was now available? They did--and this was one way the publishers of the past were able to fund more than a few works, including fiction. The completed dictionary contained over 400,000 words and nearly two million illustrative quotations. The first bound edition was twelve volumes; any fewer would have made the volumes too bulky.

Would you like a copy? You can purchase the twenty volume, 20,000 page dictionary of 2.5 million quotations illustrating over half a million words for just $895, a special 75th anniversary price (list price $3000). You might actually be tempted--after reading Winchester’s book.

 

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