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A Dictionary of the English Language (Complete and Unabridged in Two Volumes), Volume Two [Kindle Edition]

Samuel Johnson
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Thackeray called Samuel Johnson, simply, “The Great Lexicographer”. What came to be known as “Johnson’s Dictionary” is both a masterpiece of world literature and a landmark in the history of the English language. This massive work set the standard for all future dictionaries of English, and no single writer other than Shakespeare has contributed more than Johnson to the development of the language. Jane Austen, Thomas Jefferson, Charles Darwin, Charles Dickens and Charlotte Brontë all used what was known for over a century as “the dictionary”, while Samuel Taylor Coleridge said he viewed with suspicion any man “who should speak of it without respect and gratitude”. Robert Browning read it “in its entirety” to “qualify” himself as a poet, and Samuel Beckett scoured it for obscure words – among those he found, and used, were “increpation”, “inosculation”, and “to snite”. Since its first publication, it has been indispensable to anyone who cares about our language and its literature. Informative, irreverent and funny, it is a joy for everyday readers and a browser’s paradise, as well as being an indispensable resource for historians and linguists.

By making this masterpiece available once more, the release of the Lexicos edition marks an event in ebook publishing. The only ebook edition of this great work, and the only unabridged edition currently in print in any format, it has been professionally edited (not OCR’d) and formatted for the Kindle. It is based on the 1773 edition, the final edition of the Dictionary expanded and revised by Johnson himself. It also incorporates those entries included in the original 1755 edition and cut out in 1773, along with Johnson’s original preface, and his “Plan of a Dictionary of the English Language,” written in 1747. Volume One covers letters A through K, Volume Two letters L through Z. Both volumes are fully searchable and have an active table of contents.

“The most important British cultural monument of the eighteenth century.” — Henry Hitchings, Defining the World: The Extraordinary Story of Dr Johnson’s Dictionary

“More than anything else he wrote, it was the dictionary that made Johnson’s reputation, and of all his accomplishments, it’s the dictionary that most suggests the true nature of Johnson’s genius.” — Charles McGrath, New York Times

“We would earnestly recommend it to all those who are desirous to improve and correct their language, frequently to consult the dictionary. Its merit must be determined by the frequent resort that is had to it. This is the most unerring test of its value: criticisms may be false, private judgments ill-founded; but if a work of this nature be much in use, it has received the sanction of the public approbation.” — Adam Smith, Edinburgh Review

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  • File Size: 8325 KB
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  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B0056HOUXU
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Samuel Johnson's Dictionary on Kindle, Volume II December 18, 2012
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I agree wholeheartedly with Ms. Peranandam's review, contra Mr. Hughes, in their reviews of volume I, that this particular electronic edition of Johnson's dictionary is very well done in Kindle, which enhances the fact that of all reference books, and of dictionaries in particular, there is no better medium by which to use them than on a searchable medium such as Kindle. I have a Merriam-Webster 3rd Unabridged dictionary constantly open, just behind me, on a swivel library holder, and since I got the Samuel Johnson dictionary, I rarely use it, unless I am particularly intereted in the origins of meaning, since in 250 years, that research has certainly uncovered much.

In fact, I make a point of referring to Johnson specifically because I want to see the meaning of words in the "Age of Reason" England. Johnson's method of quoting several different classic sources predates by close to 100 years the method adopted by what was to become the Oxford English Dictionary. Accompanying almost all words is one or more quotes of notable exemplars. One word which caught my attention, given the recent release of the first Hobbit film, was "riddle", to which I was lead by the meaning of sieve.

Almost all the quotes are from the foremost literary works up to Johnson's time, such as:
If life sunk through you like a leaky sieve, Accuse yourself you liv'd not while you might. Dryden.

A linking meaning and quote on riddle is:
SKREEN (SKREEN) n.s.[escran, escrein, French, which Minshew derives from secerniculum, Latin. Nimis violenter ut solet, says Skinner, which may be true as to one of the senses; but if the first sense of skreen be a kind of coarse sieve or riddle, it may perhaps come, if not from cribrum, from some of the descendants of cerno.]1. A riddle or coarse sieve.

Even as I write this, and search for words associated with sieve and riddle, I discover potential sources for ideas in fiction which followed Johnson. Take this quote, for example:

As that Theban monster that propos'dHer riddle, and him, who solv'd it not, devour'd;That once found out and solv'd, for grief and spightCast herself headlong from the Ismenian steep.Milton.

Milton is speaking of Theseus and the Minotaur; however read it again and you will detect a possible inspiration for the "Riddles in the Dark" chapter of Tolkien's novel, "The Hobbit".

One may dispair of there not being complete references to sources. For Shakespearean quotes, sometimes the play is cited, and sometimes it is not. But this is a minor annoyance, and I suspect that even in the OED, complete references are not given, because editions available to those authors, as to Johnson, are probably long gone from libraries.

On Kindle, this dictionary is a superb source of quotes as well as meanings. The virtue of its being an English source is that there are no translation issues to face if you want to look up a sentence in a complete works of Shakespeare on Kindle.

For $20, this work (2 volumes) will pay for itself many times over, if you are a writer or a student of English literature or history
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5.0 out of 5 stars Great research tool April 29, 2013
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I am currently working on a historical romance. My research has always referred to 'A Dictionary of the English Language' by Samuel Johnson. I decided to get the original item and very glad I did. Just 'flipping' through the pages and becoming acquainted with words as used in Johnson's time seems to rewire my brain for 18th century thinking. I have it on my kindle, ready and waiting, for reading through old journals and letters.
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