The Meaning of Everything: The Story of the Oxford English Dictionary |
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| Title: | The Meaning of Everything: The Story of the Oxford English Dictionary |
| Author: | Simon Winchester |
| Publisher: | Oxford Paperbacks |
| Type: | Book / Paperback |
| Publication Date: | 23 September, 2004 |
| ISBN / ISBN-13: | 0192805762 / 9780192805768 |
| List Price: | £12.99 |
| You Save: | £4.03 |
| Your Price: | £8.96 Purchase |
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Editorial Review / Publisher's Information:
Product Description Publisher: Oxford University Press Date of Publication: 2004 Binding: paperback Edition: Condition: Very Good Description: 0192805762
Amazon Review Ask a logophile or crossword-puzzle addict what the holiest of holy reference works might be, and you're almost certain to receive a three-letter acronym in reply: the OED. The Meaning of Everything is its story. Now in 20 volumes and still growing, the Oxford English Dictionary is an astounding monument, one that, like the Great Wall and the Roman Forum, seems to have been around forever. But, writes the always interesting explorer Simon Winchester in, it took decades--and considerable sums of money--to bring it into being. The Scottish autodidact James Augustus Henry Murray, surrounded by a small army of underpaid and overworked helpers, laboured over it for more than half a century, seeing into print "a total of 227,779,589 letters and numbers, occupying fully 178 miles of type" that brought the elusive histories of words such as walrus (courtesy of JRR Tolkien) and cow ("the female of any bovine animal", courtesy of Murray himself) into sharp relief. The making of the great dictionary over the years and decades seems an unlikely topic for a sometimes romantic, sometimes suspenseful tale, but Winchester delivers just that. Those who cherish words will find it a constant pleasure. --Gregory McNamee
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