Abstract

Children's dictionaries are instrumental in establishing a dictionary culture and are the gateway to sustained and informed dictionary use. It is therefore surprising that very little attention is paid to these dictionaries in scholarly research. In this article we reflect on the design of two series of dictionaries and one free-standing dictionary, all presumably aimed at first-time dictionary users, specifically looking at how selected design elements are aligned with the lexicographic needs of the target users. We argue that the conceptualization of children's dictionaries for African-language-speaking children should be a bottom-up process, and that an Afrocentric approach, taking the target user's Frame of Reference as the point of departure, is preferable to a Eurocentric approach, which often leads to a mismatch between conceptual relationships and linguistic form and function in African language dictionaries.

Highlights

  • Judging by the dearth of research on children's dictionaries, lexicographers do not seem to regard this dictionary genre as worthy of serious academic attention

  • Dictionaries for children are the gateway to the establishment of a dictionary culture and it is surprising that the compilation and evaluation of such dictionaries receive so little attention from researchers in lexicography

  • In the case of the Maskew Miller Longman (MML) and NLU dictionaries, the target user is contextualized within the formal s dictionaries published in the (South) African education system, and the dictionary is presented as a tool that can support learners within a school environment

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Summary

Introduction

Judging by the dearth of research on children's dictionaries, lexicographers do not seem to regard this dictionary genre as worthy of serious academic attention. In the case of the MML and NLU dictionaries, the target user is contextualized within the formal South African education system, and the dictionary is presented as a tool that can support learners within a school environment.

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