[lg policy] book review: Green=?windows-1252?Q?=92s_?=Dictionary of Slang
Harold Schiffman
hfsclpp at GMAIL.COM
Wed Aug 22 15:15:39 UTC 2012
Green’s Dictionary of Slang
Announced at http://linguistlist.org/issues/22/22-869.html
AUTHOR: Jonathon Green
TITLE: Green's Dictionary of Slang
PUBLISHER: Oxford University Press
YEAR: 2011
Amy Coker, Archaeology, Classics & Egyptology, University of Liverpool UK
SUMMARY
This award-winning three-volume work is a dictionary of English slang. It
purports - and indeed appears to be - the most comprehensive account of
such
language available, encompassing many varieties of English as spoken around
the
world and traces as far as possible the origins of each slang word
included. One
example of a short entry follows, to give an idea of the kind of
information
this dictionary contains and how it is presented (typography simplified):
BUDMASH n. [Hind. badmash, a rascal] (orig. Ind. army) a villain, a rascal.
1888
KIPLING 'The Three Musketeers' in Plain Tales from the Hills 67: Says the
driver, 'Decoits! Wot decoits? That's Buldoo the budmash.' 1925 (con. WWI)
FRASER & GIBBONS Soldier and Sailor Words 38: Budmash: (Hind. -badmash). A
rascal. A thief.
Green thus gives the etymology of each word as far as possible, a usage
label
(e.g. 'con. WWI' = context First World War), a definition in 'standard'
English,
and dated citations for the appearance of the headword. Alternative
spellings
are given at the start of the entry. Some words are of course much more
complex:
for example, DINGBAT as a noun is split into seven distinct lemmata
according to
meaning (a strong drink; a ball of dung on the buttocks of sheep or cattle;
a
coin, pl. money; one of various types of muffin or biscuit; a term of
admiration; anything for which one cannot specify the proper name; a fool,
an
idiot) and DOG as noun or verb extends over several pages, with each split
into
uses in compounds, in phrases, in exclamations and derivatives (we find
among
many others STROKE THE DOG, DOGWAYS and DOG-BOOBY). Some phrases or sayings
are
indexed alphabetically by their first word, e.g. ARRESTED BY THE BALIFF OF
MARSHLAND (stricken with ague/malaria) is under A. Full use is also made of
the
witness of historical dictionaries of slang or cant. As one might expect, a
great number of entries refer to sex acts of various kinds and the
reproductive
organs, excretion, insult, alcohol and drugs. However, it remains difficult
to
review a dictionary, even one as engaging as Green; reference works like
this
belong to a class of books which are rarely read from start to finish and
thus
any comments made about the contents will necessarily be selective. This
review
therefore has the modest aim of describing the work and its background, and
offers a small amount of comment on the reviewer's experience of the work.
EVALUATION
First of all, this is a work of enormous size; the dictionary is in three
volumes with more than 6000 pages in total and - in its pleasingly green
hardcovers (visual pun surely intended) - it weighs in at just over a hefty
6.8kg. It represents the fruits of seventeen years of work, and according
to the
preface contains around 110,000 words and phrases, with 53,000 headwords.
The
dictionary was compiled from a database of 575,000 citations, of which
415,000
are included. The work covers the Englishes of the United Kingdom, America,
Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, South Africa and the Anglophone Caribbean.
Its
focus is 'slang', defined by Green as 'subversion of the norm' (Vol. I, p.
xiii). This is work is not, of course, the outcome of the labours of a
single
man, but one man's determination is behind the work's existence, and thus
the
dictionary bears his name, Jonathan Green. Green is a present-day celebrity
lexicographer (http://jonathangreen.co.uk), with his nickname 'Mr Slang'
apparently acquired from no lesser figure than Martin Amis. Likewise, it is
remarkable and at the same time very pleasing that a book which is
fundamentally
a specialist dictionary of English has also been deemed interesting enough
to
the general public to be reviewed in several leading UK daily newspapers,
including 'The Guardian'
(
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/dec/18/dictionary-slang-guardian-style-review).
This reviewer believes that we are lucky to be living in an age when we can
study subversive language within the discipline of linguistics for its own
sake
- slang may be 'bad language', but it is language nonetheless. The roots of
this
interest can be charted through classics such as Hughes (1991), through to
recent works on linguistic impoliteness such as Culpeper (2011), and in the
UK
at least there are at present several projects underway charting the
history of
English slang and cant. This work has caught the imagination too of Oxford
University Press; readers who want to test their slang knowledge can take
the
Green-inspired quiz in the OUP blog
(http://blog.oup.com/2012/04/know-your-slang-quiz/).
Taking the plunge and dipping in to this work, in addition to the examples
given
at the beginning of this review one discovers the recent New Zealand
compound,
LUG-PUNCH (a friendly chat), that MUTTON was used of women or prostitutes
as far
back as the early sixteenth century, and that the wonderful adjective
HORNIFIED
was an equivalent for 'cuckolded'. On this last word, note that despite
claims
that this is not a dictionary of historical slang (Vol. 1, p. xv), obsolete
words are often included; at least, 'hornified' is obsolete in my
vernacular.
Similarly, there are some points with which one might wish to quibble in
the
introduction (for example, I am not sure I would agree that 'without cities
there is no slang', p. xiii, and xiv) but these points notwithstanding,
this
work is a mammoth achievement. Coverage will always be a problem in
particular
for a dictionary of slang: the problem being that slang is created so
quickly
that is virtually impossible for print to keep up, especially with the
advent of
the internet and the mass production of written slang it spawns. There is
simply
so much slang that it cannot be recorded in a single place; Green himself
is
humble on this point, and begs the readers' pardon.
So, who is this treasure trove of a dictionary for? There are plenty of
publications on contemporary slang(s) circulating in non-academic circles,
'Roger's Profanisaurus' for example, or www.urbandictionary.com (perhaps
not for
the faint hearted), and this genre of publications has a long history,
charted
in full by the work of Professor Julie Coleman (Coleman 2004-2010). Green's
preface states that the work is aimed primarily at 'scholars of literature
and
history' and that it 'should also be of use to creative writers' (p. xv)
but
also hits the nail on the head when he says that it is a work for anyone
who is
curious enough to open it. Despite the huge size of 'Green's Dictionary',
because it is a dictionary it is fundamentally accessible, with each lemma
more
or less free standing: the reader can spend two minutes with the work, or
all
day, and still get something from it. Given the journalistic interest in
this
work (a couple of examples of which are given above), there are surely
plenty
such curious readers out there: however, given the price tag which comes
with
this book (currently advertised at £295/$625), this is not a work which
will be
appearing on the coffee table of every arm-chair linguist. The preface
indicates
intention to make the material available online, and it has now indeed
appeared
at www.greensdictionary.com; although this will undoubtedly be of immense
use to
historical linguists, the casual observer is barred if he does not have a
subscription (and indeed my own institution does not yet subscribe).
Dipping in and out of these three volumes has been a genuine treat, and a
subversive corollary to the Oxford English Dictionary's Word of the Day
(recommended to anyone who does not already subscribe); through this
process I
have definitely increased my vocabulary, although some of my colleagues may
suggest not for the better. However, joking aside and despite the fun which
can
be had with this work, 'Green's Dictionary' is not a frivolous book but a
heavyweight of scholarship. The final word is given to Green himself, who
with a
characteristically naughty wink to the reader summarises what he thinks of
those
who compile and read these works: '[I]f the reader is a voyeur, then so too
is
the lexicographer, usually male, middle-aged, middle-class. The lexis
undoubtedly leans to pimping and prostitution, crime and imprisonment,
violence
and cruelty, drugged and drunken debauches, but the lexicographer is
neither
whore nor thief, thug nor prisoner, addict nor drunkard. Or at least not
professionally.' (Vol. 1, p. xiii) I would encourage us all to become
voyeurs.
REFERENCES
Coleman, Julie. 2004-2010. A History of Cant and Slang Dictionaries. 4
Volumes.
Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Culpeper, Jonathan. 2011. Impoliteness. Using language to cause offence.
Studies
in Interactional Sociolinguistics 28. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press.
Hughes, Geoffrey. 1991. Swearing. A Social history of foul language, oaths
and
profanity in English. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
ABOUT THE REVIEWER
Amy Coker teaches Latin, Greek and Classical literature at the University
of Liverpool, UK. Her research is in the area of Classical Greek
linguistics, and she is interested in language variation and the
methodologies of studying and applying linguistic theory to ancient
languages. Her PhD thesis (Manchester, 2010) was on grammatical gender
variation in ancient Greek, and she is starting a new project on the
sociolinguistics and vocabulary of offence, specifically in ancient Greek
literature, graffiti and private letters.
http://linguistlist.org/issues/23/23-3481.html
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