Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- abbreviation Oxford English Dictionary
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- initialism linguistics Oxford English Dictionary
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- noun an unabridged dictionary constructed on historical principles
- noun an unabridged dictionary constructed on historical principles
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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But as to why it became so successful, well, I think -- I'm sure you'd agree that the simple story of murder and redemption of W.C. Miner's character through the work for the OED is a-- is quite a good story.
A Back-Story to The Man Who Loved China A Coincidence Most Curious and Telling 2010
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But if you like reading and words, Reading the OED is quite pleasant entertainment.
Archive 2009-02-01 2009
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And by “from its earliest appearance”, the OED is talking about 971.
The real difference between “between” and “among” « Motivated Grammar 2009
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[1614, Purchas, cited in OED] (3b) Luckily. .our speculations are supported by facts.
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In fact the definition of career from the OED is “move swiftly and in an uncontrolled way in a specified direction.”
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I think as far as the evidence in the OED is concerned, and we can now tell a bit more about that because we've got the OED on computer and you can run various programs to check on currency at various times in the past.
A Back-Story to The Man Who Loved China A Coincidence Most Curious and Telling 2010
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But if you like reading and words, Reading the OED is quite pleasant entertainment.
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And by “from its earliest appearance”, the OED is talking about 971.
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Regrettably, this means that the following people are dunces: the editorial board of the Oxford English Dictionary, John Milton [cited in OED], Charles Dickens [in Martin Chuzzlewit], and John Bunyan [in Pilgrim's Progress].
What’s the deal with further and farther? « Motivated Grammar 2008
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Regrettably, this means that the following people are dunces: the editorial board of the Oxford English Dictionary, John Milton [cited in OED], Charles Dickens [in Martin Chuzzlewit], and John Bunyan [in Pilgrim's Progress].
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