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November 28, 2005
A Year in Reading: Three bests from Language Hat
The New Oxford American Dictionary is a delight to look at and to use. I especially appreciate the "core sense" system, which means that the first definitions given "represent typical, central uses of the word in question in modern standard English," far more useful than Merriam-Webster's historical ordering (which often leaves the unwary user thinking some obsolete sense is the basic meaning). It's an encyclopedic dictionary, meaning proper nouns are included along with all the other words; as they say, "names such as Shakespeare and Mississippi are as much part of the language as words such as drama or river." It tries to "break down the barriers to understanding specialist vocabulary," providing comprehensible explanations as the main definition and including technical information as subentries. And of course it draws on the extensive Oxford data collections. More at Language Hat.
Guy Deutscher's The Unfolding of Language has its problems (mainly stemming from an ill-advised attempt to cram a technical hypothesis about the origins of the Semitic verbal system into a book for the general reader), but it's written with style and humor, and it was a real pleasure to read a book on historical linguistics by somebody who knows what he's talking about. If enough people read this book, I won't have to work so hard to introduce the basic facts of language change. More at Language Hat.
Maria Benet's Mapmaker of Absences mixes formal pleasure with lived emotion and exact perception; I've found myself returning to it often during some difficult times this past year. I prefer poetry that lets tradition inform the emotions and needs of the present, and I'm glad I can still find books that give me that pleasure. More at Language Hat.
- C. Max Magee @ 11:40 PM ~
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