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Thursday was Wolvercote Cemetery and the resting place of my hero James Murray, the longest-serving Editor of the Oxford English Dictionary from 1879 up to his death in 1915.
The Dictionary People. By Sarah Ogilvie. Knopf; 384 pages; $30. Chatto & Windus; £20. I n July 1915 an ailing James Murray (pictured), one of the early editors of the Oxford English Dictionary ...
Sir James Murray, right, and his editorial team work on the Oxford English Dictionary in the central workroom known as the Scriptorium. From “The Dictionary People,” by Sarah Ogilvie.
Martin Fone, who has long been fascinated by words, digs in to the story of how Sir James Murray created the first Oxford English Dictionary — despite having a full-time job and 11 children — and ...
An expert in music and mathematics and an authority on English phonology, he had been contacted by the editor James Murray to assist with compiling what would become the Oxford English Dictionary.
When James Murray took command in 1879, the Oxford English Dictionary could best be defined by the word disarray. The irony of making this massive reference book was that it required millions upon ...
The Oxford English Dictionary is not your everyday dictionary. ... It wasn’t until Dr. James Murray, a philologist, took over that the modern OED began taking shape.
James Murray, surrounded by thousands of postcard-sized quotations, brought the dictionary to life in this "scriptorium". (Getty: PA Images) ...
The Oxford English Dictionary calls itself “the definitive record of the English language, featuring 600,000 words, 3 million quotations, ... Dr. James Murray, a philologist, ...
James Murray, the Scottish philologist who left school at fourteen and, in 1879, ... the Oxford Dictionary of African American English. No Scriptorium this time, ...
Sarah Ogilvie’s sprightly “The Dictionary People” pays tribute to the explorers, suffragists, murderers and ordinary citizens who helped create the Oxford English Dictionary.