This paper applies the methodology of corpus linguistics to Dr Johnson\u2019s Dictionary in order to evaluate the lexicographer\u2019s mastery and interest in registering actual language usage. Specifically, it focuses on the ways and extent to which Dr Johnson's Dictionary accounts for the enormously varied and ever-changing lexico-functional category of intensifiers (e.g. abominably, abundantly, ardently, bad), varying connotations, type and degree of expressivity, as well as style and register restrictions. By using the Dictionary itself as a corpus and referring for comparison to the Oxford English Dictionary (restricted to the relevant time span), we demonstrate that intensifiers in the Dictionary \u2013 around 860 altogether \u2013 ar...
The usefulness of the dictionary is readily recognized and this partially explains why such a tool h...
Background. This article examines lexicography - a separate science that includes theoretical lexico...
Although not much has been written about Richardson’s New Dictionary, Beal (2004), Dolezal (1989, 20...
This paper applies the methodology of corpus linguistics to Dr Johnson’s Dictionary in order to eval...
This paper investigates in what ways and to what extent Noah Webster accounts for different types an...
The lexico-functional category of intensifiers comprises core items expressing degree (very), and le...
Depending on source domain, pattern of intensification and extent of grammaticalization, intensifier...
The author presents a model for investigating the collocational behaviour of English upgrading inten...
More than hundred 'Johnson's' dictionaries have so far been published not only in English but in oth...
English lexicographers, those harmless drudges as Dr. Johnson called them, go all the way back to ...
While there are a number of conditions which have contributed to the continued neglect of Samuel Joh...
Lexicographers have always understood the importance of working with authentic language data in desc...
Samuel Johnson, compiler of the first dictionary of the English language, included in its his defini...
When we look up a word in a dictionary, we want to know not just its meaning but also its function a...
International audienceThe renewal of intensifiers and variations in language registers: a case-study...
The usefulness of the dictionary is readily recognized and this partially explains why such a tool h...
Background. This article examines lexicography - a separate science that includes theoretical lexico...
Although not much has been written about Richardson’s New Dictionary, Beal (2004), Dolezal (1989, 20...
This paper applies the methodology of corpus linguistics to Dr Johnson’s Dictionary in order to eval...
This paper investigates in what ways and to what extent Noah Webster accounts for different types an...
The lexico-functional category of intensifiers comprises core items expressing degree (very), and le...
Depending on source domain, pattern of intensification and extent of grammaticalization, intensifier...
The author presents a model for investigating the collocational behaviour of English upgrading inten...
More than hundred 'Johnson's' dictionaries have so far been published not only in English but in oth...
English lexicographers, those harmless drudges as Dr. Johnson called them, go all the way back to ...
While there are a number of conditions which have contributed to the continued neglect of Samuel Joh...
Lexicographers have always understood the importance of working with authentic language data in desc...
Samuel Johnson, compiler of the first dictionary of the English language, included in its his defini...
When we look up a word in a dictionary, we want to know not just its meaning but also its function a...
International audienceThe renewal of intensifiers and variations in language registers: a case-study...
The usefulness of the dictionary is readily recognized and this partially explains why such a tool h...
Background. This article examines lexicography - a separate science that includes theoretical lexico...
Although not much has been written about Richardson’s New Dictionary, Beal (2004), Dolezal (1989, 20...