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Loading... Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionaryby Merriam-Webster
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. Based on Webster's Third New International Dictionary. Can't read much without this book around. AND it comes with a CD so I don't even need to grab the book. I try to keep one in every room of the house. (For you who don't know me, I'm practically illiterate without my dictionary, and I can't even spell "kat" without it. I turn to this one when I don't want to page through my OED I haven't used a paper dictionary since discovering dictionary.com, but who knows when you'll need a low tech backup? It's not the OED, so more obscure words may not be included. Still, it's a decent basic reference book. I won a copy of this dictionary in 6th Grade for winning a summer reading competition. It has never failed, even after my two year old ripped the cover half-off. Clear printing on acid-free paper, too. no reviews | add a review
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History of the Church–Turing thesis List of Counts and Dukes of Valois | Wikipedia:Categories for discussion/Log/2008 December 27 |
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But getting back to the book itself--it's impressively comprehensive for a collegiate dictionary, with more than 215,000 definitions. Each item includes a pithy wealth of information, with first usage date, etymology, and pronunciation, and clear, precise definitions. In addition, there are often usage notes, synonym cross-references, illustrative quotations, variant spellings and pronunciations, regional labels, and information on capitalization, function, and inflections. Then there are the extra touches. Under bible, for example, there's a chart detailing books of the Old Testament, Jewish Scripture, Protestant apocrypha, and books of the New Testament. Under months is a table listing the months of the principal calendars--Gregorian, Jewish, and Islamic. And wonderful line drawings illustrate terms such as mackerel, lyrebird, hedgehog, and the ancient Celtic stringed instrument known as a crowd. All this makes it a valuable reference--detailed enough for editors and writers, accessible enough for students and casual definition seekers, updated with the new vocabulary of technology, and rigorous enough for the linguistic perfectionists. --Stephanie Gold
(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:03 -0400)
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