Abstract

One finding of user studies is that information on meaning tends to be what dictionary users want most from their dictionaries. This is consistent with the traditional image of the dictionary as a repository of meanings of words, and this is also borne out in definitions of the item DICTIONARY itself as given in dictionaries. While this popular view has not changed much, the growing role of electronic dictionaries can change the lexicographers' approach to meaning representation. Traditionally, paper dictionaries have explained words with words, using either a definition or an equivalent, and occasionally a line-drawn picture. However, a prominent feature of the electronic medium is its multimodality, and this offers potential for the description of meaning. While it is much easier to include pictorial content, electronic dictionaries can also hold media objects which paper cannot carry, such as audio, animation or video. Publishers are drawn by the attraction of these new options, but are they always functionally useful for the dictionary users? In this article, the existing evidence is examined, and informed guesses are offered where evidence is not yet available. Keywords: Electronic Dictionary, Meaning, Illustration, Animation, Audio, Sound Effects, Video, Multimodality, Specialized Lexicography, Learner's Dictionary

Highlights

  • 1.1 Lexicography: words and beyondTraditionally, lexicography is about words

  • The questions addressed in this article are the following: How does the current transition of dictionaries to the electronic medium affect the role of the traditional verbal orientation of lexicography? Will the shift to the electronic mode lead to words being used in a different way in lexicographic explanation? how can dictionaries transcend words and employ other modalities: static and animated graphics, audio recordings, video sequences? 1

  • This finding finds support in dictionary definitions themselves, such as the one given under the entry dictionary in the Cambridge Dictionary for Advanced Learners (CALD2, Walter 2005): 292 Robert Lew dictionary noun [C] 1 a book that contains a list of words in alphabetical order with their meanings explained or written in another language, or a similar product for use on a computer

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Summary

Lexicography: words and beyond

(as well as etymologically), lexicography is about words. Words (in the various technical senses of this general-language term) are the primary objects of description of dictionaries. Words are not just the thing being described; they have remained the most important instrument of the dictionary-maker in the very job of describing. Have figured prominently on both sides of the lexicographic equation. The questions addressed in this article are the following: How does the current transition of dictionaries to the electronic medium affect the role of the traditional verbal orientation of lexicography? Will the shift to the electronic mode lead to words being used in a different way in lexicographic explanation? How can dictionaries transcend words and employ other modalities: static and animated graphics, audio recordings, video sequences? The questions addressed in this article are the following: How does the current transition of dictionaries to the electronic medium affect the role of the traditional verbal orientation of lexicography? Will the shift to the electronic mode lead to words being used in a different way in lexicographic explanation? how can dictionaries transcend words and employ other modalities: static and animated graphics, audio recordings, video sequences? 1

Meaning as a central notion in lexicography
Definition
Defining vocabulary
Equivalent
Example
Audio presentation of verbal elements
Non-verbal mode
Audio recordings of non-linguistic sounds
Photographs
Graphs
Animation
Video clips
Findings
Closing comments
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