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- <text id=89TT0856>
- <title>
- Mar. 27, 1989: A Scholarly Everest Gets Bigger
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Mar. 27, 1989 Is Anything Safe?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BOOKS, Page 95
- A Scholarly Everest Gets Bigger
- </hdr><body>
- <p>The Oxford English Dictionary updates and goes electronic
- </p>
- <p>By Paul Gray
- </p>
- <p> There will be no greater publishing event this century than
- the appearance of the new OED.
- </p>
- <p> -- Anthony Burgess
- </p>
- <p> This eye-popping blurb -- about a dictionary, no less --
- may seem a bit of a stretcher. But the Oxford English Dictionary
- is not just another reference book, an arcane preserve of
- scholars and authors, like Burgess, who use language to make
- their livings. Since its completion in 1928, exactly 71 years
- after it was proposed at a meeting of the Philological Society
- in London, the OED has stood as the ultimate authority on the
- tongue of Shakespeare and the King James Bible, not to mention
- the language of tradespeople and the slang of the streets.
- Relatively few speakers of English consulted it, to be sure; but
- many were reassured by the knowledge that it, an Everest of
- scholarship, was there.
- </p>
- <p> And it is here again, updated and expanded, a mammoth
- historical progress report on a language with a vocabulary, the
- world's largest, that grows by an estimated 450 words a year.
- The second edition, in 20 volumes, dedicated to Queen Elizabeth
- II, will be officially unveiled at celebrations in London next
- week. It is a statistician's dream. It contains 21,728 pages and
- defines 616,500 words and terms, using nearly 60 million words
- (34% more than the first OED) to do so; it also costs $2,500.
- </p>
- <p> What that money will buy is the most pertinent fact about
- the OED2, at least to prospective customers. In essence, the
- new edition collates into alphabetical order three distinct
- elements: 1) the first OED, largely unchanged, although some
- errors and lapses have been corrected; 2) the contents of the
- four supplements to the first edition, which appeared between
- 1972 and 1986; and 3) roughly 5,000 words or expressions that
- have gained currency since the early '70s.
- </p>
- <p> These last entries are likely to attract most of the
- preliminary attention. The OED2 co-editors, John Simpson and
- Edmund Weiner, note that the generating ferment in English has
- shifted from the literary world toward those of science,
- business, medicine and North American slang. In fact, a partial
- listing of what the language has been up to lately is enough to
- inspire depression: brain-dead, nose job, right-to-die, acid
- rain, crack, heat-seeker, asset stripping, greenmail,
- petro-currency, barf, drunk tank. There is not much here that
- would inspire Keats to write an ode.
- </p>
- <p> On the other hand, every new term, however inelegant, is
- given the treatment that long ago distinguished the OED from
- all competitors. This dictionary does not merely give
- etymologies, pronunciations and definitions; it also provides
- a word's earliest known appearance in print and uses quotations
- to illustrate the context in which the word has been used and
- all shifts of meaning to which it has been subjected. Hence AIDS
- (another lamentable addition to the lexicon) is defined and then
- traced back to its presumptive print debut, in the Morbidity &
- Mortality Weekly Report of Sept. 24, 1982.
- </p>
- <p> Invisible behind the plethora of pages in the OED2 are
- hidden commands heralding an advance that will revolutionize the
- way it -- and perhaps all reference books -- is used in the
- future. Amazingly, this entire venture was conceived and
- completed within a span of seven years. A. Walton Litz, a
- professor of English at Princeton and a member of the Oxford
- University Press advisory council, says, "I've never been
- associated with a project, I've never even heard of a project,
- that was so incredibly complicated and that met every deadline."
- Some of this speed and success can be attributed to the
- efficient cooperation among firms in Britain, Canada and the
- U.S., all of whom contributed essential parts to the larger
- whole. But the principal reason why this edition was prepared
- so rapidly can be cited in a word that did not appear in the
- first OED: computerization.
- </p>
- <p> In short, the new dictionary, all 350 million characters of
- it, now exists as a data base, an electronic version stored in
- a massive computer memory. At first glance, this may seem
- unremarkable; the difference between a lot of words on the page
- and on some terminal screen appears to be chiefly one of weight.
- But that is not the whole story. Electronic information can be
- made available to interested readers in a manner not possible
- through print. The task of devising software that would ferret
- out new uses for the OED2 was assigned to the University of
- Waterloo in Ontario. There a team of computer scientists led by
- Gaston Gonnet and Frank Tompa, both 40, responded with a
- vengeance.
- </p>
- <p> They devised programs that can search through the OED2 and
- come up with information that would have taken weeks, years or
- lifetimes to assemble before. Word of this advance in data
- retrieval has been spreading among computer and dictionary buffs
- for months. Tompa has letters on his desk asking how many words
- entered English directly from German and how many references to
- the Malay language appear in the dictionary. Child's play,
- apparently. He is more interested in the broader possibilities.
- "It would be relatively straightforward," he says, "to compile
- dictionaries for distinct historical periods, to produce
- something, say, that would present only the vocabulary available
- to Shakespeare. The same thing could be done with reference to
- important legal documents, pointing out what the words of the
- laws actually meant at the time they were written."
- </p>
- <p> Such spin-offs from the parent dictionary are, for the
- moment, purely speculative. Similarly, it will be at least 18
- months before anyone can buy the OED2 in computer form. A
- laser-disc version of the first OED, however, with software less
- powerful than the newest Waterloo innovations, has been
- commercially available for the past year.
- </p>
- <p> In the meantime, Tompa and his colleagues have the
- technology to answer some interesting questions. Given the
- 2,435,671 quotations included in the OED2, which single author
- wins the citation sweepstakes? Most people would guess
- Shakespeare, and they would be right: 33,150 times. But who
- comes second? Tompa's keyboard clicks away, and the answer soon
- appears: Sir Walter Scott, 16,548.
- </p>
- <p> Sir Walter Scott? But of course. The bulk of the new OED
- retains the stamp of the age in which it was born; it remains
- a triumph of Victorian duty and taxonomic zeal, of a century in
- which Scott was one of the most popular authors writing in
- English. Now that the text has become electronic and easier to
- revise, future OEDs may lose this 19th century bias. Not too
- soon, though, it is to be hoped. These handsome new books,
- containing a trove of information waiting to be mined, stand
- solidly between the past and future. They are an inexhaustible
- record of what we have written and said and the foundation for
- what we may yet come to invent.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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