A New English Dictionary
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Find sources: "A New English Dictionary" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (March 2024) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
A New English Dictionary: or, a complete collection of the most proper and significant words, commonly used in the language was an English dictionary compiled by philologist John Kersey and first published in London in 1702.[1]
Differences from previous dictionaries
[edit ]Unlike previous dictionaries, which had focused on documenting difficult words, A New English Dictionary was one of the first to focus on words in common usage.[1] It was also the first to be written by a professional lexicographer.[citation needed ]
Kersey's subsequent works
[edit ]Kersey later continued his lexicographic career by enlarging Edward Phillips' The New World of English Words in 1706 and editing the Dictionarium Anglo-Britannicum in 1708.
Similarly-titled work
[edit ]The original title of the Oxford English Dictionary was A New English Dictionary on Historical Principles, and it was sometimes given the abbreviation NED, for New English Dictionary.
References
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