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Last update:
2 September 2010

© John Benjamins
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A Practical Guide to Lexicography

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Edited by Piet van Sterkenburg
Institute for Dutch Lexicology, Leiden

2003. xii, 460 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 2329 6 / EUR 145.00
978 1 58811 380 1 / USD 218.00
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PaperbackIn stock
978 90 272 2330 2 / EUR 65.00
978 1 58811 381 8 / USD 98.00

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e-BookAvailable from e-book platforms
978 90 272 9651 1 / EUR 145.00 / USD 218.00
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This is a state-of-the-art Guide to the fascinating world of the lexicon and its description in various types of dictionaries.
A team of experts brings together a solid Introduction to Lexicography and leads you through decision-making processes step-by-step to compile and design dictionaries for general and specific purposes. The domains of lexicography are outlined and its specific terminology is explained in the Glossary. Each chapter provides ample suggestions for further reading. Naturally, electronic dictionaries, corpus analysis, and database management are central themes throughout the book.
The book also "introduces" questions about the many types of definition, meaning, sense relations, and stylistics. And that is not all: those afraid to embark on a dictionary adventure will find out all about the pitfalls in the chapters on Design.
A Practical Guide to Lexicography introduces and seduces you to learn about the achievements, unexpected possibilities, and challenges of modern-day lexicography.


Table of contents

Preface
ix
I. The forms, contents and uses of dictionaries
Chapter 1. Foundations
1.1 ‘The’ dictionary: Definition and history
Piet van Sterkenburg
3–17
1.2 Source materials for dictionaries
František Čermák
18–25
1.3 Uses and users of dictionaries
Paul Bogaards
26–33
1.4 Types of articles, their structure and different types of lemmata
Rufus H. Gouws
34–43
1.5 Dictionary typologies: A pragmatic approach
Piet Swanepoel
44–69
Chapter 2. Descriptive lexicography
2.1 Phonological, morphological and syntactic specifications in monolingual dictionaries
Johan De Caluwé and Ariane van Santen
71–82
2.2 Meaning and definition
Dirk Geeraerts
83–93
2.3 Dictionaries of proverbs
Stanisław Prędota
94–101
2.4 Pragmatic specifications: Usage indications, labels, examples; dictionaries of style, dictionaries of collocations
Igor Burkhanov
102–113
2.5 Morphology in dictionaries
Johan De Caluwé and Johan Taeldeman
114–126
2.6 Onomasiological specifications and a concise history of onomasiological dictionaries
Piet van Sterkenburg
127–143
Chapter 3. Special types of dictionaries
3.1 Types of bilingual dictionaries
Mike Hannay
145–153
3.2 Specialized lexicography and specialized dictionaries
Lynne Bowker
154–164
II. Linguistic corpora (databases) and the compilation of dictionaries
Chapter 4. Corpora for dictionaries
4.1 Corpora for lexicography
John McH. Sinclair
167–178
4.2 Corpus processing
John McH. Sinclair
179–193
4.3 Multifunctional linguistic databases: Their multiple use
Truus Kruyt
194–203
4.4 Lexicographic workbench: A case history
Daniel Ridings
204–214
Chapter 5. Design of dictionaries
5.1 Developments in electronic dictionary design
Lineke Oppentocht and Rik Schutz
215–227
5.2 Linguistic corpora (databases) and the compilation of dictionaries
Krista Varantola
228–239
5.3 The design of online lexicons
Sean Michael Burke
240–249
Chapter 6. Realisation of dictionaries
6.1 The codification of phonological, morphological, and syntactic information
Geert Booij
251–259
6.2 The production and use of occurrence examples
John Simpson
260–272
6.3 The codification of semantic information
Fons Moerdijk
273–296
6.4 The codification of usage by labels
Henk J. Verkuyl, Maarten Janssen and Frank Jansen
297–311
6.5 The codification of etymological information
Nicoline van der Sijs
314–321
Chapter 7. Examples of design and production criteria for major dictionaries
7.1 Examples of design and production criteria for bilingual dictionaries
Wim Honselaar
323–332
7.2 Design and production of terminological dictionaries
Willy Martin and Hennie van der Vliet
333–349
7.3 Design and production of monolingual dictionaries
Ferenc Kiefer and Piet van Sterkenburg
350–365
7.4 Towards an ‘ideal’ Dictionary of English Collocations
Stefania Nuccorini
366–387
Glossary
389–419
Bibliography
421–442
General index
443–459


This Guide is certainly of great interest to dictionary makers and dictionary users: its main merit is related to the light that it sheds on technological developments that make lexicography a whole new technical domain in linguistics: potentially much richer, much more useful to all other domains in linguistics and much more user-friendly. Furthermore, the light shed on electronic dictionaries also highlights the lexicographic heritage and the lexicographers know how.
Alina Villalva, Professor of Linguistics, University of Lisbon

[...] offers a solid introduction to current lexicography. The book is user-friendly and intended to be safe and efficient guide for those who want to know how dictonaries are made. [...] the team clearly demonstrates that in lexicography there are “universals” of dictionary production.
Jean-Claude Boulanger, Université Laval, Canada, in Terminology Vol. 10:2 (2004)

According to the words of the editor, the volume was designed as an easily accessible introduction to the world of lexicography and a reliable compass for those wishing to know how dictionaries are made. The authors have more than fulfilled these objectives. The reader is acquainted with the theory and with the state-of-the-art methods of lexicography. Each chapter provides the most current information about diverse aspects of dictionary functioning, structure, compilation, and usage. The book will become a convenient tool for lexicographers, but also for students of linguistics.
Jan Holeš, Palacký University, Czech republic, in Language Vol. 82:1 (2006)

This book runs the gamut of a wide variation of topics in lexicography.
Michael Klotz, in Lexicographica 21/2005