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221
On the Metalexicographic Genre of Dictionary Reviews, with Specific Reference to LexicoNordica and Lexikos
In: Lexikos, Vol 26, Pp 60-81 (2016) (2016)
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222
Advantages and Disadvantages in the Use of Internet as a Corpus: The Case of the Online Dictionaries of Spanish Valladolid-UVa
In: Lexikos, Vol 26, Pp 273-295 (2016) (2016)
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223
Etc. The Long-Lasting Defining Device: Unravelling the Mystery
In: Lexikos, Vol 26, Pp 36-59 (2016) (2016)
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224
Comparing Dictionary-induced Vocabulary Learning and Inferencing in the Context of Reading
In: Lexikos, Vol 26, Pp 372-390 (2016) (2016)
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225
Ekwivalentverhoudings in tweetalige woordeboeke: Implikasies vir die databasis van 'n elektroniese tweetalige woordeboek van Suid-Afrikaanse Gebaretaal en Afrikaans
In: Lexikos, Vol 25, Pp 151-169 (2015) (2015)
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226
Using an Online Dictionary for Identifying the Meanings of Verb Phrases by Chinese EFL Learners
In: Lexikos, Vol 25, Pp 191-209 (2015) (2015)
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227
Multimodal Definition: The Multiplication of Meaning in Electronic Dictionaries
In: Lexikos, Vol 25, Pp 210-232 (2015) (2015)
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228
Eine neue Adressierungsart: Positionsadressierung bei indexikalischen Angaben und funktionalen Angabezusätzen
In: Lexikos, Vol 25, Pp 446-460 (2015) (2015)
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229
Phases and Steps in the Access to Data in Information Tools
In: Lexikos, Vol 25, Pp 1-30 (2015) (2015)
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230
The Presentation and Treatment of Collocations as Secondary Guiding Elements in Dictionaries
In: Lexikos, Vol 25, Pp 170-190 (2015) (2015)
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231
Diasystematic Information in the "Big Five": A Comparison of Print Dictionaries, CD-ROMS/DVD-ROMS and Online Dictionaries
In: Lexikos, Vol 25 (2015) (2015)
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232
On the Most Innovative Outer Access Structure of any Bantu Dictionary: The Lexique kikongo–français by Charles Polis (1938)
In: Lexikos, Vol 25, Pp 56-135 (2015) (2015)
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233
Towards Linking User Interface Translation Needs to Lexicographic Theory
In: Lexikos, Vol 25, Pp 136-150 (2015) (2015)
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234
The Design of Morphological/ Linguistic Data in L1 and L2 Monolingual, Explanatory Dictionaries: A Functional and/or Linguistic Approach?
In: Lexikos, Vol 25, Pp 353-386 (2015) (2015)
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235
Legal Terms in General Dictionaries of English: The Civil Procedure Mystery
In: Lexikos, Vol 25, Pp 246-261 (2015) (2015)
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236
Treatment of Spelling Variants in Setswana Monolingual Dictionaries
In: Lexikos, Vol 25, Pp 262-284 (2015) (2015)
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237
Methods in Lexicography and Dictionary Research
In: Lexikos, Vol 25, Pp 232-352 (2015) (2015)
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238
From Print to Digital: Implications for Dictionary Policy and Lexicographic Conventions
In: Lexikos, Vol 25, Pp 201-322 (2015) (2015)
Abstract: Editorial policies and lexicographic conventions have evolved over hundreds of years. They developed at a time when dictionaries were printed books of finite dimensions — as they have been for almost the whole of their history. In many cases, styles which we take for granted as "natural" features of dictionaries are in reality expedients designed to compress maxi-mum information into the limited space available. A simple example is the kind of "recursive" definition found in many English dictionaries where a nominalization (such as assimilation) is defined in terms of the related verb ("the act of assimilating or state of being assimilated"), and the user is required to make a second look-up (to the base word). Is this an ideal solution, or was it favoured simply as a less space-intensive alternative to a self-sufficient explanation? As dictionaries gradually migrate from print to digital media, space constraints disappear. Some problems simply evaporate. To give a trivial example, the need for abbreviations, tildes and the like no longer exists (though a surprising number of dictionaries maintain these conventions even in their digital versions). So the question arises whether we need to revisit, and re-evaluate, the entire range of editorial policies and conventions in the light of changed circumstances. This paper looks at some familiar editorial and presentational conventions, and considers which are no longer appropriate in the digital medium — and what new policies might replace them.
Keyword: Africa; definitions; digital media; example sentences; exclusion criteria; gatekeeper; Germanic languages. Scandinavian languages; Languages and literature of Eastern Asia; lexicographic conventions; Oceania; online dictionary; P1-1091; PD1-7159; Philology. Linguistics; PL1-8844; user profile
URL: https://doi.org/10.5788/25-1-1301
https://doaj.org/article/05eb6157fcc9432aad257d2a3069395d
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239
Corpus-based Lexicography for Lesser-resourced Languages — Maximizing the Limited Corpus
In: Lexikos, Vol 25, Pp 285-300 (2015) (2015)
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240
Preparing an Online Dictionary of Business Communication: From Idea to Design
In: Lexikos, Vol 25, Pp 403-423 (2015) (2015)
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