Editorial Review:For many speakers and learners of English, the word "Oxford" spells authority about language. The second edition of the Oxford Dictionary of English is no exception. Any dictionary which comes from Oxford University Press (whose origins lie in the Middle Ages, the foundation of the university and the dawn of printing) tends to be in a different league from its competitors. Based on the "Oxford English Corpus", language databases, which amount to "hundreds of millions of words of written and spoken English in machine-readable form", this hefty single-volume dictionary has four million words of text. That includes 355,000 words phrases and definitions, 12,000 encyclopaedic entries and 68,000 explanations. The statistics are mind blowing. Like all good dictionaries it's bang up to date. "Greasy spoon", "data smog" and "WMD" are all here, scrupulously glossed. So, of course are wonderful, old, near-obsolete words like "editrice" and "bouffant". Plenty of proper names get in too. Did you know that a "Queensland blue" is a cattle dog with a dark speckled body as opposed to a "Queensland nut" which is another name for the macadamia nut? Like other new dictionaries the Oxford Dictionary of English provides boxed usage notes which point up, say, the difference between "pedal" and "peddle" or discuss the vexed old question of whether infinitives may be split. More unusual are the 14 detailed appendices on, for example, English in electronic communications, collective nouns and proof-reading marks. Most useful of all is probably the "Guide to Good English" which manages to be both admirably concise and immaculately clear. --Susan Elkin Reader Reviews:An Oxford monster (0/0 people found this helpful)This is a 'monster' of a tome, and probably the best single dictionary (and quite a bit more)resource you'll need.
The Best (0/0 people found this helpful)In our house this is called The Book. I am not a native English speaker but live in England for 10 years. It has only failed me on one or two occasions for VERY specific words, otherwise - absolutely fantastic. I love explanations for origin of some words and historic notes - on many occasions it doubles as the encyclopedia. Wonderful. The bees' knees of dictionaries (4/4 people found this helpful)A huge, detailed dictionary - and encyclopedia - makes it really two books in one. Its clear layout makes it incredibly user-friendly too. Take care when page turning though!
Does not live up to its reputation (13/21 people found this helpful)I bought this dictionary as a definitive for the English language, but was very disappointed.
Stomping read (3/28 people found this helpful)I agree with the previous review, but my money was on the Aardvark - I hadn't sussed the Zebra! Similar ProductsOxford Thesaurus of English (Thesaurus) Oxford A-Z of Grammar and Punctuation Roget's Thesaurus of English Words and Phrases: 150th Anniversary Edition Oxford Paperback Thesaurus (Thesaurus **) CategoriesAmazon.co.uk places this book into the following categories:
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