In:Processes of Change: Studies in Late Modern and Present-Day English
Edited by Sandra Jansen and Lucia Siebers
[Studies in Language Variation 21] 2019
► pp. 1–14
Chapter 3The obelisk and the asterisk
Early to Late Modern Views on Language and Change
Published online: 13 August 2019
https://doi.org/10.1075/silv.21.03bur
https://doi.org/10.1075/silv.21.03bur
This chapter explores the complexities of the prescriptive-descriptive divide as revealed in three
dictionaries from the early to late Modern English period. Lexicographers had not yet arrived at the idea that
dictionaries should include all words; hence, those they chose to record in permanent form are telling. Also
informative is their application of symbols to certain entries. No doubt this notation was informing readers these
words were to be treated differently in some way. Yet, these lexicographers did not seem interested in expunging the
entries – and they were certainly not advocating an invariable language. Their aims were more to guide readers in
their choice of words and to outline different stylistic choices. Echoing David Crystal (2006a: 106) and linguistic wisdom today, “be linguistically prepared” could well have been their
motto.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.A brief introduction to the dictionaries
- 2.1The flourishing of “hard words”
- 3.The dictionary makers and their linguistic outlook
- 3.1Notations of correctness or something else
- 3.2The real linguistic bêtes noires of these dictionary makers
- 4.The murky ground between prescription and description
- 5.Concluding remarks – “a marriage of contraries”
Acknowledgments Notes References
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Cited by (2)
Cited by two other publications
Burridge, Kate & Howard Manns
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