Murray’s 3 rd in command: William Craigie
Murray’s 4 th in command: Charles Onions
Murray’s successors C.T. OnionsHenry Bradley William Craigie
a1548 Hall Chron., Hen. IV. (1550) 32b, Duryng whiche sickenes as Auctors write he caused his crowne to be set on the pillowe at his beddes heade. An OED slip for set (v.)
An OED slip for ne’er-do-well 1887 Beatrice Potter [N.B. Mrs Sidney Webb since 1892] Nineteenth Century, Oct. 1887, p. 483, The Dock Life of East London, The popular imagination represents the dock- labourer either as an irrecoverable ne’er-do-well, or as a down-fallen angel
William Minor, inmate of the Broadmoor Asylum for the Criminally Insane
OED editorial assistant J.R.R. Tolkien
1928: OED (1 st edn) completed; 15,490 pages; 414,825 words
The OED Supplements Five supplements were published: –first one in 1933 –four further ones in Aims: to keep up with new developments in vocabulary and to correct/add to the existing material
Editor of OED, Robert Burchfield
Second edition of OED 1989: 2 nd edition –Integrated all the material of the 1 st edition and the supplements into one work –Added 5,000 new words –20 volumes
Editors of OED since 1985 John Simpson Edmund Weiner
OED on CD-ROM (1992) and Internet (late 1990s) –Moving from word to word at a single click –Option of making visible or suppressing certain types of information –Many search options, e.g. searching through all the quotations in the OED (ca. 17 million words of text – equivalent to ca 40,000 printed pages)
THE OED on the internet
Optimistic plans for 3 rd edition of OED OED Newsletter January 1995 John Simpson, Chief Editor, Oxford English Dictionary: “This is the first of a new-style series of newsletter, intended to keep readers up to date on progress towards the third edition of the Oxford English Dictionary, scheduled for publication in the year Our current objective is nothing less than a comprehensive revision of the OED, most of which has not been re-edited since the original publication of OED1 between 1884 and 1928.”
3 rd edition of OED: a renewed encounter with reality –A megajob (cost: £34 million) –Aim: checking and correcting all the existing material; adding much more contemporary material –So far: letters M, N, O, P, Q and R (in progress) –Results are regularly added to the OED on its website (quarterly updates; the words RAN – REAMY were added in Dec 2008)
Modern appeals for assistance BBC2 programme Balderdash and Piffle (2006; 2007) Generating interest in the project Appeal for help from the public: WORDHUNT e.g.balti – origins? the Beeb – who first used this form? to bonk – used before 1975?
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