In addition to leveling churches, houses, and graveyards, ethnic cleansers burn books, encyclopedias, and dictionaries. |
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Questions as to the meaning of words in documents can rarely, if ever, be determined conclusively by reference to dictionaries. |
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There were also some dictionaries, encyclopedias and travel books, so I could say that their library was complete. |
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Don't act like you've never heard a swear word before, the lot of you are walking dictionaries. |
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And can we take a moment to thank all our readers who sent in English slang dictionaries? |
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The standard dictionaries of English quotations don't have a single Indian entry. |
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Instead I had to settle for a couple of old-fashioned dictionaries of quotations. |
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There were lots of bookshelves filled with books, encyclopedias and dictionaries. |
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It is the kind used in pronouncing dictionaries, and is referred to informally as broad transcription. |
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Mark Twain claimed never to have coined a word as far as he knew, though historical dictionaries list him as the first user of many. |
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The market for spellcheckers and monolingual dictionaries would be greatly reduced. |
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The list ran the gamut from Aristotle to Zen, from The Catcher in the Rye to The Cat in the Hat, from epic novels to unabridged dictionaries. |
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Chimalpahin wrote in an idiosyncratic Nahuatl not always found in colonial grammars and dictionaries or even in the writings of other Nahuas. |
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And then there is a collection of dictionaries that must be quite unparalleled. |
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There are tools on the Internet that use dictionaries of common words and phrases to crack a password. |
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Dominated by religious texts, comics and dictionaries, most volumes are bound in plastic to stop browsing and keep covers clean. |
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He seems, first of all, to misunderstand that dictionaries of the English language are descriptive, not prescriptive. |
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The way they sell new dictionaries is by calling attention to all the new words they've located. |
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A little French is indispensable, even if it's just from pocket dictionaries and phrase books. |
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In many dictionaries, there is no cross-reference to words used to give the meaning of a headword. |
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Although nineteenth-century missionaries created orthographies and dictionaries for some of the languages, indigenous literature is mostly oral. |
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In partial defense of the language police, citing permissive dictionaries to justify new usage is begging the question. |
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If you wanted to learn French, there'd be dictionaries, phrase books, videos, CD-ROMs, children's games, Dr. Seuss in French, flash cards. |
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Most Sanskrit words are polysemic, as can be noted by the many entries for each word in Sanskrit dictionaries. |
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There are dictionaries, and cyclopaedias, and summaries, and synopses, and indexes, and catalogues on every imaginable subject. |
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The Judge said she had, in the absence of any statutory definition, consulted several dictionaries for a definition of the word record. |
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In all, you can access up to 150 dictionaries, glossaries and reference works about the word you're exploring. |
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In practice, dictionaries take a middle course between wholehearted descriptivism and prescriptive edicts. |
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Jamaican Creole, for instance, has grammars and dictionaries as well as de facto norms, but there is no standard Jamaican Creole. |
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We have no comprehensive dictionary, no etymological dictionary, no dictionaries of regionalisms, no modern thesaurus. |
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The publication of French dictionaries and lexicons by Enlightenment scholars further eroded regionalisms. |
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The dictionaries don't agree on whether Tex-Mex means Americanized Mexican food in general or specifically the kind from Texas. |
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In addition, many local libraries have legal dictionaries that list attorneys and their areas of expertise in and around your state. |
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There's not much of a market for old dictionaries with half the pages missing. |
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He glared angrily at the small screen of the portable television that he had propped on top of a large stack of dictionaries and rule books. |
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The major e-library sites will offer on-line reference tools like encyclopedias and dictionaries along with thousands of books and journal articles. |
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In dictionaries, adjectives are always given in the masculine singular and this may not be the form in which you need the adjective and you may have to change it. |
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Although it does carry standard grammars and dictionaries for the biblical languages, I've owned them all for over thirty years now and they are of no interest to me. |
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All the dictionaries in my house agree that aitch is correct. |
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Among the reference books on display at the exhibition are several popular dictionaries and wordbooks, all aimed at increasing vocabulary and improving communication skills. |
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It is not only encyclopaedias, dictionaries, and libraries that create the illusion of a semblance of order from a mass of chaotic and random materials. |
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With the exception of cyclopaedias and dictionaries, almost every book that aims at being useful requires an index to make its store of knowledge accessible. |
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If it appears in any electronic list, including census information, dictionaries, thesaurus or phone books your password will not withstand a basic dictionary attack. |
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Apart from in books and dictionaries it was a word that was hardly heard. |
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While the language of flowers and foliage is a dead language today, the dictionaries for this language still exist and inspire the more romantic, or devious, among us. |
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They don't look anything up in serious grammars or dictionaries. |
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For those who have consulted dictionaries for the word, its typical appearance between serenade and serene may bring a sense of tranquility and unruffled repose. |
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Compensation is now a mental disease that will challenge the lexicographers of medical dictionaries to define a mindset which I can only describe as compensationitis. |
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In both instances, Hebrew and English dictionaries, the lexicographers have paid no attention to the insights and distinctions of medical anthropologists. |
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In addition to that, it may be used in practical applications, such as interactive grammatical lookup and intelligent dictionaries, spell checkers, etc. |
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While this information is in good dictionaries, I have sometimes wanted a more convenient list of words used in Epic which start with the digamma. |
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Today, there are hundreds of language and subject dictionaries, but rarely are these wonderful works of reference available to those who need them. |
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Douglas Coupland, the trendspotter who defined Generation X, nailed the phenomomen when he coined the term McJob, which now appears in some US dictionaries. |
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This is also the first year that candidates whose first language is not English or Irish will be allowed to use bilingual translation dictionaries in certain examinations. |
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My birthdate is available in several biographical dictionaries but beware! |
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Both monolingual dictionaries and bilingual dictionaries intended for speakers of languages other than English usually indicate the pronunciation of words. |
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And some of these people write glosses for well-respected dictionaries. |
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This distinction is not made by some linguists and does not appear in most dictionaries. |
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Samuel Johnson compiled one of the most influential dictionaries of the English language. |
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A strict dichotomy between dictionaries and encyclopedias is arguably untenable. For this reason, a cline of encyclopedicity can be proposed. |
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I want him to barely remember that this is the form factor that dictionaries used to come in. |
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Online dictionaries and grammars are likely to influence usage much more than their traditional Fowlerian counterparts ever did. |
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Although some Latin dictionaries use J, it is rarely used for Latin text, as it was not used in classical times, but many other languages use it. |
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Some dictionaries list hyphenated words as though they contained no punctuation. |
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The new dictionaries of the Old Norse language enabled the Victorians to grapple with the primary Icelandic sagas. |
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This painstaking process of checking texts and cultural data rather than dictionaries may seem to be not worth the candle for some long-rangers. |
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Electronic dictionaries are increasingly a more common choice for ESL students. |
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Old Urdu dictionaries also contain most of the Sanskrit words now present in Hindi. |
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In the 17th century there began a tradition of Old English literature dictionaries and references. |
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However, there was open dissatisfaction with the dictionaries of the period. |
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The Tamil Lexicon, published by the University of Madras, was one of the earliest dictionaries published in the Indian languages. |
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Blurb is a neonism, a modern manufactured word which appears in only the most recent dictionaries. |
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A few writers on the periphery still mention it, influenced by the dictionaries and classic writings of former times. |
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There are also fake entries in dictionaries and encyclopedias, known as nihilartikels, which serve the same purpose. |
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Casual arrangement of headwords in dictionaries is a mixture of alphabetic and semantic arrangements. |
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Today bilingual dictionaries have been published for Breton and languages including English, Dutch, German, Spanish and Welsh. |
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Wong system, used by many Chinese dictionaries later published in Hong Kong. |
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Many dictionaries ignore the Breton language, citing Old French gravele or gravelle. |
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New dictionaries of the Old Norse language enabled more Victorians to read the Icelandic Sagas. |
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Even though the dictionaries are sometimes used as official decrees of the language, their main purpose is to describe current usage. |
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Unfortunately, those dictionaries published by Brill in the Leiden series have been removed from the University databases for copyright reasons. |
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Current French dictionaries, such as the Petit Larousse, include several hundred Helvetisms. |
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In the course of learning Japanese, they created several grammars and dictionaries of Middle Japanese. |
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For instance, English dictionaries list readable and readability, words with derivational suffixes, along with their root read. |
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Some learner's dictionaries have developed defining vocabularies which contain only most common and basic words. |
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As a result word definitions in such dictionaries can be understood even by learners with a limited vocabulary. |
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Some publishers produce dictionaries based on word frequency or thematic groups. |
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These differences became noticeable after the publishing of influential dictionaries. |
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It may be codified in normative dictionaries and grammars, or by an agreed collection of exemplary texts. |
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Johnson established both a methodology for how dictionaries should be put together and a paradigm for how entries should be presented. |
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Poets mined his dictionaries, often drawing upon the lexicography in order to express word play. |
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Austin argues that Webster's dictionaries helped redefine Americanism in an era of highly flexible cultural identity. |
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So many dictionaries of varied size and quality have been called Webster's that the name no longer has any specific brand meaning. |
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In recent years, even established dictionaries with no direct link to Noah Webster whatsoever have adopted his name, adding to the confusion. |
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The IPA is also not universal among dictionaries in languages other than English. |
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The IPA is more common in bilingual dictionaries, but there are exceptions here too. |
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The library has many dictionaries and other reference books. |
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The first Canadian dictionaries of Canadian English were edited by Walter Spencer Avis and published by Gage Ltd. |
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Some dictionaries include additional senses equating acronym with initialism. |
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Most or all philosophical dictionaries list the neutral sense as the first or only definition. |
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Encyclopedia entries are longer and more detailed than those in most dictionaries. |
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Thus encyclopedias may contain material that is also found in dictionaries, and vice versa. |
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In his preface, Harris stated that he got less help from previous dictionaries than one would expect. |
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Gather a variety of dictionaries and thesaurusi written for middle-school students as well as adults. |
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Toboggan has not yet found its Way into the dictionaries, and there are other ways of spelling it. |
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Following the rules of Greek grammar, that would mean the plural should be rhinocerotes but most dictionaries accept rhinoceroses. |
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Although Wiedemann was also an outstanding lexicologist and compiled comprehensive dictionaries, his calling was grammar. |
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This was one of the first Italian-English dictionaries which utilized US-English rather than British English as a reference point. |
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Modern dictionaries barely scratch the surface in explaining what distinguishes sgraffiti from graffiti. |
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The software offers reference information in real time, including content from sources such as dictionaries, encyclopedias and thesauri. |
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Those visits were of great importance for Mordvin, Mari and Mansi dictionaries. |
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As to CAs, it is interesting that some monolingual dictionaries dare to deal with them as their subentries, or run-on entries. |
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More than 10 million visitors each month use its translation services, dictionaries, grammar tools and online conjugator. |
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Ditto for other Ancient Greek hapax legomena that got into dictionaries only because they were coined in classic works. |
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First of all, the species were structured hierarchically into hyperonyms and hyponyms with the help of the Modern English dictionaries mentioned below. |
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But the end of a long-running dispute this week means Gmail is unlikely to enter dictionaries in Britain alongside J-Cloths, X Boxes and T-shirts anytime soon. |
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Collaborative online resources such as Wiktionary may offer a first view of recent coinages which have not yet been included in traditional dictionaries. |
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Most dictionaries cover most adverbs with only run-on entries. |
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Generally speaking, dictionaries provide linguistic information about words themselves, while encyclopedias focus more on the thing for which those words stand. |
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There are some broad differences between encyclopedias and dictionaries. |
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Entries in English dictionaries aim to reflect common usage. |
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However, most dictionaries simply say its etymology is unknown. |
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Many secondary schools in Canada use the graded dictionaries. |
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Random House dictionaries are now called Random House Webster's, and Microsoft's Encarta World English Dictionary is now Encarta Webster's Dictionary. |
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Below is a list of years of publication of the Collegiate dictionaries. |
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Standardization typically involves a fixed orthography, codification in authoritative grammars and dictionaries and public acceptance of these standards. |
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Grammars and dictionaries of indigenous languages were composed throughout the colonial period, but their quality was highest in the initial period. |
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In these modern days, education has upgraded its methods of teaching and learning with dictionaries where digital materials are being applied as tools. |
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Along with growth in numbers, dictionaries and encyclopedias also grew in length, often having multiple print runs that sometimes included in supplemented editions. |
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Encyclopedias and dictionaries also became more popular during the Age of Enlightenment as the number of educated consumers who could afford such texts began to multiply. |
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This definition is found or alluded to in some internet dictionaries. |
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