PUBLICATION INFORMATION FALL 2017

The DSNA Newsletter is usually published twice a year, in the Spring and Fall. The editor is David Jost. Member news items can be sent to dsna.membernews@gmail.com. Other Newsletter correspondence, such as articles for publication, should be directed to the editor at dajebj@gmail.com. Send correspondence re membership, etc. to Kory Stamper, Executive Secretary, DSNA PO Box 537 Collingswood, NJ 08108-0537 This issue:  Vol. 41 No. 2 (2017) Cumulative issue #84  ...
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MUSIC FROM THE 2017 DSNA CONFERENCE

Brianne Hughes, Katy Isaacs, Lisa Berglund Three Lexicographers are We Lisa Berglund (parody of "Three Little Maids from School are We" from the Mikado by Gilbert and Sullivan   Three lexicographers are we Wise as a wordsmith well can be Filled to the brim with philology -- Three lexicographers!   Ev’ ry word is a source of fun Decades go by and you’ve just begun Writing a book that’s never done: Three lexicographers!   Three lexicographers learned, very, In all the nonsense necessary For to compile a dictionary Three lexicographers! Three lexicographers!   One with a king held a dialogue One in a shed through the slips did slog One lexicographer writes a blog Three lexicographers!   One did compose Greek and Latin verse Two: in Phoenician could converse; Three: is a star in the Twitterverse! Three lexicographers!   Three lexicographers learned, very, In all the nonsense necessary For to compile a dictionary Three lexicographers! Three lexicographers!   When You Use a Dictionary Lisa Berglund (parody of "Never Mind the Why and Wherefore" from HMS Pinafore by Gilbert and Sullivan   When you use a dictionary Be judicious and be wary; Lexicography, I warn you, Is a complicated trade, And the product is like sausage So...
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EDUCATION NEWS FALL 2017

Mark Alan Canada Several of you expressed interest in the assignment I described in my “Teaching Lexicography” talk [at the DSNA Conference in Barbados].  Here it is: Coin a word and write a dictionary entry for it. Your entry should include all of the components of a standard dictionary entry: headword, pronunciation symbols, and information about part of speech, denotation, and etymology. Thus, you should become very familiar with your own hardback dictionary and understand the form and purpose of each of these components. Don't worry about using fancy pronunciation symbols; just try to represent the pronunciation of the word with normal letters. Finally, please include a paragraph explaining your reason for coining this word, the type of process of word formation it demonstrates (blending, compounding, acronym, eponym, etc.), labels for the morphemes in the word (free/bound, base/affix, derivational affix/inflectional affix), a sentence or two about the word's part of speech, and at least one sample sentence. (Length: 250-300 words. Sources: 2. Value: 10 points.) As I explained in my talk,...
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DICTIONARY NEWS FALL 2017

The Middle English Dictionary project Paul Schaffner We at the University of Michigan Library are pleased to report that revision of the Middle English Dictionary https://quod.lib.umich.edu/m/med/ and its associated resources has begun, after a 20-year hiatus, thanks to a two-year grant (2016-18) awarded under the Humanities Collections and Reference Resources program of the National Endowment for the Humanities. Our hope is that this effort will set in motion a process of ongoing revision, but our immediate goals are to perform only the most urgent updates, publishing as much supplementary information as we can, even when we cannot afford to integrate it fully into the existing online Dictionary. We have been attaching to the appropriate entries additional quotes and notes taken chiefly from two sources: (1) about 20,000 'supplement slips' set aside over decades by the MED editors in hope that an MED Supplement would someday be compiled. These have hitherto lain largely inaccessible in boxes in the university archives. And (2) a...
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COLLECTION NEWS FALL 2017

An Interview with Bryan A. Garner David Vancil Bryan A. Garner earned his undergraduate and law degrees from The University of Texas at Austin, the latter in 1984. Bryan's undergraduate senior thesis was on aspects of Shakespeare’s usage, revealing an interest in English usage that later manifested itself in his many published books. Widely known for his lexicographic accomplishments, Bryan is president of LawProse Inc., which assists with legal writing and provides seminars to improve the writing skills of practicing lawyers. He is also the author of more than two dozen books on writing and legal advocacy. He’s even written a book on the rules of golf “in plain English.” Anyone who has followed Bryan’s career or examined his work will know that he’s an advocate of clear and straightforward written expression. The fourth edition of Garner’s Modern English Usage introduced ratios, based on big data, showing the relative frequency of standard and variant forms of a given usage—a real innovation in lexicography. He’s...
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DSNA NEWS FALL 2017

The latest news includes information about our Publications Committee (PubCom), two Society awards, a gift the Society has recently made, and the dates of our 2019 conference. New Office and Officer in her own words "By day, Brianne Hughes is a technical editor at Bishop Fox, where she ensures the quality of information security reports, develops internal reference materials, and provides ongoing training to consultants. By night, she continues her compound morphology research at EncyclopediaBriannica.com. She has shared her linguistic findings with Ignite Portland, SHEL/DSNA, and Odd Salon. She is a member of the American Copy Editors Society (ACES), is Associate Executive Secretary for the Dictionary Society of North America (DSNA), and is on the board of directors at Wordnik Society, Inc. Brianne received a Masters in Linguistics from the University of York in 2012."   PubCom Wendi Nichols, head of the committee, describes the purview of the committee: In general we oversee the information channels of the Society - the journal, the newsletter, and the website. We advise on books to review...
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MEMBER NEWS FALL 2017

Kory Stamper’s debut book Word by Word: The Secret Life of Dictionaries was published by Pantheon in March and has attracted widespread interest, with appreciative articles appearing in the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, the Atlantic, and other print and digital media, along with interviews on NPR’s Fresh Air and Here and Now. A review in Publisher’s Weekly describes Word by Word as “A witty, sly, occasionally profane behind-the-scenes tour aimed at deposing the notion of ‘real and proper English.’” David Vancil, a longtime contributor to the DSNA newsletter and former curator of the Cordell Collection of Dictionaries, has published in many fields touching on collections held in the library of Indiana State University. Included in this bibliography are two books he compiled relating to the history of lexicography and four monographs bringing together many of his published poems. Lexicography: Catalog of Dictionaries, Word Books, and Philological Texts, 1440-1900: Inventory of the Cordell Collection of Dictionaries, Indiana State University. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1993. 397 pp. Incunable Dictionaries: A Checklist and Publishing History. Kevin Jett, editorial assistant. Terre...
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INTRODUCTION FALL 2017

In this issue of the Newsletter you will find a celebration, bibliomania, vital history, and educational material of interest as well as much else. I have formalized various departments such as Member News, DSNA News, and so on. Once again I am grateful for the editorial help of Peter Chipman of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt and the American Heritage Dictionary. Please remember that you the members are the resource for the Newsletter and I welcome all contributors. David Jost, Editor  ...
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