This is a major new edition of the world-famous Concise Oxford English Dictionary , published together with a fully up-to-date text of the dictionary on CD-ROM, containing over 240,000 words, phrases, and definitions, including 1,800 new words. It offers rich vocabulary coverage, with full treatment of World English, rare, historical, and archaic terms, as well as scientific and technical vocabulary, and provides hundreds of helpful notes on grammar and usage.
The CD-ROM version of the dictionary offers full-text search functionality, instant look-up from WindowsR documents, including email and the Internet, high-quality spoken pronunciations for thousands of words, and interactive educational word games, making it ideal for family use, as well as for homework and school use.
New to this edition is a fascinating Word Histories feature, telling the often bizarre stories of the origins and development of hundreds of words. For example, did you know that the word grammar is related to glamour , or that cockney used to mean a spoilt child ? This dictionary also contains full appendices on topics such as alphabets, currencies, electronic English, and the registers of language, from formal to slang, plus a useful Guide to Good English with advice on grammar, punctuation, and spelling.
Naturally I have not read this cover to cover, but like with a few other reference books I have, I wanted to mark it down.
I ordered this because I missed being able to look up a word and then snoop around for other words that were on the same page as my word.
The online dictionary I use is great, but I miss the way a print dictionary looks and feels. My edition arrived in today's mail, and I will be keeping it close for lots of exploring!
A bit of a disjointed and wordy story about an Aardvark who goes through many, many random adventures as he searches for a xylophone that he can take to his friend the zebra at a zoo.
I suppose through habit and school, this is my dictionary of first resort - I do own four others including the Shorter Oxford. It is accessible, sensible in its definitions and in the main authoritative.
This was a very good dictionary. It was simpler than the regular Oxford dictionary, rarely using words that I had to define in the definitions of other words. This edition is from 2009, but that didn’t make it outdated, since this dictionary contained useful modern terminology about things like computers, while leaving out hateful neologisms like “twerk”. Additionally, this dictionary also contained whimsies like a history of the Oxford dictionary, a list of collective nouns, and another list of words and phrases of foreign origin. Like all dictionaries, I haven’t read the whole thing, but what I have read is superb.
Mine copy didn't have the CD with it, but in every other way this is the edition I have.
I use this one most, and like the clear, concise, meanings in plain English.
But I also have the Shorter Oxford dictionary as well if I wish to look deeper for shades of meaning, perhaps in older texts where the meaning may have changed over time. That version does have a CD-Rom, which is brilliant too, especially as it provides pronunciation. It is here I go browsing words
And yes I have another as well, but this one sits on my beside table with books I'm currently reading and I tend to pick it up in case I need to look up something, so is in frequent use.
My son gave me this dictionary for Christmas to replace the awful one we have been using the past nine or ten years. Word origins and phrases are included, which is exactly what I wanted. Recently I looked up the word "plashy" as it was used in a poem, and while the old dictionary did not contain this word, the new Oxford dictionary did. Additionally, the Oxford dictionary has interesting appendices such as Prime Ministers and Presidents. Out with the old dictionary and in with the new!
This special edition of the Concise Oxford English Dictionary was made for that dictionary’s one hundredth anniversary. Fittingly, there were special additions made, such as an explanation of the dictionary’s history, and some boxes underneath words that show how the word meaning has changed in a century. The vocabulary was updated for 2011, but this dictionary is still as accurate as ever.
The best part about the Oxford is that it shows the pronunciation phonetically, instead of using those stupid symbols, the name of which has escaped me since undergrad English.
In it's tenth edition, the world's most popular dictionary has undergone a most thorough revision. More than 200,000 clear, concise entries define a vast array of ideas and words with highlighted usage notes and maps.