14.1822, Review: Lexicography: Jackson (2002)

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LINGUIST List:  Vol-14-1822. Tue Jul 1 2003. ISSN: 1068-4875.

Subject: 14.1822, Review: Lexicography: Jackson (2002)

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1)
Date:  Mon, 30 Jun 2003 11:12:55 +0000
From:  terry at linguistlist.org
Subject:  Lexicography

-------------------------------- Message 1 -------------------------------

Date:  Mon, 30 Jun 2003 11:12:55 +0000
From:  terry at linguistlist.org
Subject:  Lexicography



The following information was submitted to the LINGUIST:

Date:30-Jun-03
From:Terry Langendoen <terry at linguistlist.org>
Subject:Lexicography: Jackson (2002) Jackson Howard  (2002)Lexicography.
Routledge (Taylor and Francis), 208,Paperback,0415231736,25.95

Announced at http://linguistlist.org/issues/13/13-1472.html

Donald Reindl Date: Sun, 29 Jun 2003 11:29:28 -0500 (EST)
From: Donald F. Reindl <dreindl at indiana.edu>
Subject: Lexicography: An Introduction

Jackson, Howard (2002) Lexicography: An Introduction, Routledge.

Donald F. Reindl, Indiana University, Bloomington

SYNOPSIS

     Howard Jackson's ''Lexicography: An Introduction'' is an
introduction to lexicography in the broadest sense, including
essential terms and definitions, overviews of historical trends in the
field, various ''how to'' aspects of lexicography, and suggestions for
the systematic evaluation of lexicographic works.
     Chapter 1 ''Words'' defines basic linguistic concepts (e.g.,
word, lexeme, morpheme) relevant to lexicography, while Chapter 2
''Facts about words'' examines the historical roots of the English
language and various word types (e.g., acronyms, loanwords, compounds,
synonyms, antonyms), often further subdividing these (e.g. gradable,
mutually exclusive and converse antonyms). This overview will chiefly
be informative to beginning students, although the examples provided
and their classification can also serve as a handy reference for
experienced linguists.
     The role of the dictionary as part of our cultural fabric is
examined in Chapter 3 ''The dictionary.'' Jackson looks at popular
perceptions of ''the dictionary,'' and gives an overview of types
(historical, contemporary, general purpose, specialist, etc.) and
parts (front matter, body, appendices) of dictionaries. It is also
here that the primary scope of the book is established; namely, a
treatment of monolingual dictionaries. It readily becomes apparent
that the book is further restricted to English-language monolingual
dictionaries, and chiefly British ones at that. Nonetheless, a great
deal of what is addressed applies to other categories of dictionaries.
     Chapters 4 through 6 give an overview of the historical
development of English dictionaries. Jackson is particularly good at
connecting the material at hand to its social and historical context.
Thus we read, for example, how the Renaissance dictionaries were
conceived of as lists of difficult words for the benefit of ''the
unlearned Reader,'' ''Ladies, Gentlewomen, or any other unskilfull
persons,'' the ''curious'' or ''ignorant,'' or anyone else without the
benefits of a classical education (pp. 32-38).
     The development of the idea of the Oxford English Dictionary
(OED) is covered extensively in chapter 5, from the founding of the
Philological Society in 1842 to the launching of the OED on-line in
March 2000. Along the way, there is detailed coverage of issues such
as the structure of entries in the OED as well as interspersed
references to decisions such as the introduction of International
Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) notation in the second edition of the OED.
     Jackson briefly crosses the Atlantic in Chapter 6 to look at the
efforts by Noah Webster (1758-1843) to create a dictionary of American
English. In doing so, he provides interesting documentation of
Webster's own nationalist and economic motivations for establishing an
orthographically distinct variety of English, as well as resistance to
the idea by some of Webster's fellow Americans.
     However, the assessment of Webster's influence is overly modest.
Jackson states that ''the spelling reforms that were adopted in
American English were only a limited subset of those proposed by
Webster,'' (p. 62) citing three: -our > -or (Br. favour, Am. favor), -
re > -er (Br. theatre, Am. theater), and certain single consonants
(Br. traveller, Am. traveler). In fact, Webster's influence on
orthography was even greater, and in some cases extends to today's
British orthography, with changes such as -ck > -c (Old Br. publick,
Br./Am. public; this change was also occurring in Br. by the end of
the 18th century), -er > -or based on Latin spelling (Old Br. visiter
> Br./Am. visitor), and -ise > -ize based on Greek or Latin origin
(Br. organise, Br./Am. organize).
     The volume's scant six pages devoted to American lexicography end
on a sour note, dwelling on negative reactions to the appearance of
Webster's Third New International in 1961.
     Chapter 7 ''Users and uses'' examines two basic questions: who
are the users of dictionaries and for what purpose do they use them?
These are notoriously difficult to answer, except to say that a broad
range of users employs dictionaries for multiple purposes. It is
generally agreed that checking meaning and spelling predominate among
uses of the dictionary, although speakers of English as a foreign
language (EFL) frequently use monolingual English dictionaries to
check syntactic patterns and look for synonyms as well.
     Chapters 8 ''Meaning in dictionaries'' and 9 ''Beyond
definition'' delve into the nuts and bolts of dictionary composition:
what to define, arrangement of material (lumping and splitting,
ordering of senses historically or by frequency), writing definitions,
including sense relations (synonyms, hyponyms, etc.), representation
of spelling and pronunciation, and indicating inflection, word class,
and usage.
     Regarding pronunciation, attention is drawn to the general (but
not exclusive) use of IPA in British lexicography versus a
''respelling'' system in American dictionaries, with a useful
contrastive table on page 103. Inasmuch as ''any transcription system
will constitute a learning task for the user'' (p. 103), the British
use of IPA seems a clear advantage over the idiosyncratic dots,
digraphs, underlining, circumflexes and other conventions found in
American dictionaries.
     In Chapter 10 ''Etymology,'' Jackson observes that there is
little evidence that most dictionary users make use of etymological
information. Rather, it has become an established part of the English
dictionary through historical accident and tradition.
     Jackson characterizes American lexicography as paying less
attention to etymology than British lexicography (p. 67). However, the
only modern American dictionary referred to in the book -- Webster's
Third New International -- features etymologies equal to or more
complete than those cited from British sources. In this light, it is
also odd that there is no reference to the American Heritage
Dictionary (1969), which was groundbreaking in its inclusion of Indo-
European roots in its etymological material.
     Chapter 11 ''Dictionaries for learners'' addresses the explosion
in dictionaries designed to assist EFL learners. For the last half-
century, these have sought to aid students by focusing on grammatical
patterns not readily derived from standard dictionaries and limiting
the range of vocabulary included. In this reviewer's experience,
however, learners are sometimes frustrated by the bewildering variety
of intermediate dictionaries they are expected to graduate from and
into. But, as Jackson observes, the ''EFL market is a lucrative one
for publishers'' and so we might expect this area of lexicography to
expand even further.
     In Chapter 12 ''Abandoning the alphabet,'' Jackson takes a look
at the millennium-long history of works based on the semantic
arrangement of vocabulary, culminating in the thesaurus. Nonetheless,
a reliance on alphabetized lists persists and the polysemy of many
words demands their multiple entry in thematic lists. Both of these
factors indicate that alphabetically arranged dictionaries will remain
the norm.
     There is a return to nuts and bolts in Chapter 13 ''Compiling
dictionaries,'' where planning, staffing, budgets, data banks, and
computer corpora all receive attention in turn.
     Chapter 14 ''Criticising dictionaries'' is a particularly useful
section for anyone wishing to professionally evaluate a dictionary.
As Jackson points out, there are few general standards or criteria for
this purpose, and popular reviews often give the impression of being
written with no parameters in mind. As a remedy, Jackson offers four
categories for evaluating the presentation of a dictionary, and twelve
categories for critically examining its content.

EVALUATION

     A particular strength of Jackson's book lies in its relevant
biographical information about influential persons in the history of
lexicography. Reading details about the lives of Frederick Furnivall
(1825-1910, 48-49), James Murray (1837-1915, pp. 49-51) and Peter Mark
Roget (1779-1869, pp. 149-150) brings these characters to life,
contributing to an understanding of not only the motivations that
underlay their efforts, but the challenges they faced as well.
     In general, the terms and examples provided conform to standard
linguistic usage. An exception is his characterization of ''folk
etymology'' as tracing a word to an old cultural practice, such as the
derivation of ''bigwig'' from the former practice of prominent men
wearing large wigs (p. 119). A folk etymology is, of course, an
erroneous explanation of a word's origin (e.g., sirloin < *Sir Loin)
or popular transformation of a word to a more familiar form (e.g.,
chaise longue > chaise lounge).
     Each chapter ends with a useful annotated list of material
entitled ''Further Reading'' to guide those interested in learning
more about the topic. The internal organization of the chapters is
quite good, with numbered section headers (e.g., ''9.6 Usage,''
''9.6.1 Dialect,'' ''9.6.2 Formality,'' ''9.6.3 Status,''
etc.). Unfortunately, there is no concise overview of these section
titles, neither in the table of contents nor at the beginnings of the
individual chapters.
     One of the major shortcomings of the work is an occasional
tendency to become mired in detail. The description of the features
and use of the electronic version of the Concise Oxford Dictionary
(pp. 70-71) reads more like a user's manual or a sales plug than an
introduction to lexicography. The book becomes similarly bogged down
in the discussion of learner's dictionaries, for example, by citing
the page numbers of all of the color plates in the Oxford Advanced
Learner's Dictionary (p 140).
     Repetition is another problem in the book. For example, one is
informed three times (pp. 25, 162, 177) that two columns of text is
usual on a page, but some dictionaries have three columns of text.
Similarly, the detailed explanation of how to use Boolean operators
and wildcards in electronic searches on pages 70-71 is encountered
again on page 141.
     The volume could also be improved by expanding its relatively
brief index of 100 or so terms. At times, it is hard to see why some
relatively obscure items were included (e.g., meronymy) but others
omitted (e.g., cognate, etymological fallacy, IPA, Thorndike's block
system, etc.). The lack of better indexing (and the skeletal table of
contents) means that there is much useful information in the volume
that is not readily accessible for later consultation.
     ''Lexicography: An Introduction'' is a work that will be enjoyed
by amateur and professional linguists alike. Its virtues more than
make up for its deficiencies, and the latter could easily be addressed
in a revised edition.

ABOUT THE REVIEWER

Donald F. Reindl is a doctoral candidate in Slavic linguistics at the
Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures at Indiana University,
Bloomington, IN. His research interests include historical
linguistics, language planning, and language contact. He is currently
working as a translator and lecturer at the University of Ljubljana,
Slovenia.


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