
E. S. C. Weiner
Author of The Oxford English Dictionary
About the Author
Works by E. S. C. Weiner
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Other names
- Weiner, Edmund
- Birthdate
- 1950-08-27
- Gender
- male
- Occupations
- philologist
lexicographer - Organizations
- Oxford University Press
- Awards and honors
- Fellow of Kellogg College, Oxford University
- Nationality
- UK
- Birthplace
- Oxford, Oxfordshire, England, UK
- Places of residence
- Oxford, Oxfordshire, England, UK
- Associated Place (for map)
- Oxford, Oxfordshire, England, UK
Members
Reviews
Without doubt the greatest lexical achievement produced thus far and probably the best printed dictionary that will ever be (since it'll all be just internets from here on out). Beautifully made, cleanly written, and tremendously researched. Fun just to leaf through, definitive in settling disagreements this is a book more people should spend more time with, myself included.
I love this dictionary. Sometimes I flip it open and read it just for fun, peering down at the page with my funky replacement magnifying glass (having lost the sleek one which came standard, tucked into its very own drawer), reading about the histories of my favorite words or finding new ones that I'll probably never have any occasion to use. This dictionary also makes an excellent end table, if you're not the sort of person who is bothered by coffee rings to your books. Mine looks like crap show more - battered and stained, scuffed on all sides from repeated moves. It's a set made to be used - sturdy binding, clear type, table-sized slipcase, handy drawer for stuff - and that just makes me love it more. In fact (and I realize that by now I am starting to sound a little insane), we have two copies in our house. People think this is excessive, but what if something happened to one of them? Better to have a spare, just in case.
Yes. I love this dictionary. show less
Yes. I love this dictionary. show less
Please note: there are TWO different Compact Editions. Most know about the two-volume reprint of the original 1928 edition of the dictionary, with the pages reduced to fit four on a page. But there is a more recent ONE-volume reprint of the 1989 Second Edition--a massive volume the size of an atlas, but three times as thick, with the pages made even smaller so as to fit NINE on a page, and with an even more powerful magnifier. This is the one I have, and it is one of my most prized show more possessions.
I have gained more pleasure out of browsing its forest of near-microscopic type than with any other reference book I've ever encountered. It is utterly exhaustive; it is absolutely authoritative; it is stunningly beautifully written. Nobody who loves the English language should be without one.
The only barrier for most people will be its extremely high cost--but, as this is the product of over 120 years of intense work by hundreds of dedicated people, the cost is well worth it. I have free access to the online version through the library, but because I love to browse, I still insisted on a print version, any print version. And now I will be enjoying this book for the rest of my life.
If you love English, and especially if you write for a living, you absolutely MUST own the OED. Beg, steal, borrow, spend weeks trawling through eBay, do whatever you have to do, but get it. You will NOT be sorry. show less
I have gained more pleasure out of browsing its forest of near-microscopic type than with any other reference book I've ever encountered. It is utterly exhaustive; it is absolutely authoritative; it is stunningly beautifully written. Nobody who loves the English language should be without one.
The only barrier for most people will be its extremely high cost--but, as this is the product of over 120 years of intense work by hundreds of dedicated people, the cost is well worth it. I have free access to the online version through the library, but because I love to browse, I still insisted on a print version, any print version. And now I will be enjoying this book for the rest of my life.
If you love English, and especially if you write for a living, you absolutely MUST own the OED. Beg, steal, borrow, spend weeks trawling through eBay, do whatever you have to do, but get it. You will NOT be sorry. show less
A slender, but interesting little volume, which, in spite of the title, is far more about Tolkien's use of language than about the OED. Tolkien's short career with the OED is covered, with interesting discussion of particular words that he worked on, but the bulk of the book treats our his philological expertise affected his use and coinage of words to give the appropriate flavor to the fantasy worlds he created. It is, perhaps, a little disconcerting to see the full-gunned philological show more treatment normally reserved for older and greater writers extended to a work of fantasy literature, but whether your interest is in Tolkien or in the history of English, this section is entertaining and enlightening. show less
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Statistics
- Works
- 14
- Also by
- 3
- Members
- 2,672
- Popularity
- #9,606
- Rating
- 4.5
- Reviews
- 45
- ISBNs
- 27
- Languages
- 1












