For example, the editors of the Oxford English Dictionary liken the lexicographer to the naturalist. |
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When everything is so unlimited, the aspring lexicographer has to look for equivalents in a chosen foreign language. |
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Today's lexicographer, at the click of a mouse, has access to a huge corpus of modern English, written and spoken alike. |
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Khalil Ibn Ahmad al-Farahidi, the famous Arab philologist and lexicographer, was entrusted with devising a new Tashkil system. |
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Bound dictionaries don't determine what is or isn't a word, as Erin McKean, a lexicographer, explains in her delightful TED talk. Finally, to the next meta-question, why do we get so worked up about these tiny things? |
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The best lexicographer may well be content if his productions are received by the world with cold esteem. |
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The lexicographer Suidas enumerates the works of Horapollo, the philologer and commentator on Greek poetry. |
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The last half-decade has seen Clarence Major receiving attention that his thirty-year career as a fictionist, poet, essayist, anthologist, lexicographer, and painter deserves. |
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The orthographic alternation between sin and samekh naturally presents problems for both lexicographer and reader, but surely one should also be consistent here. |
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Johnson, was an English writer who made lasting contributions to English literature as a poet, essayist, moralist, literary critic, biographer, editor and lexicographer. |
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