Mozart jouait déjà du piano à l'âge de quatre ans ! Imaginez s'il avait diffusé ses premiers disques sur les radios libres européennes et réalisé lui-même les clips vidéo de ses premières oeuvres musicales afin de les vendre aux plus grandes chaînes internationales de télévision par satellite. Il aurait eu sans doute le rare privilège d'être l'artiste le plus téléchargé illégalement sur Internet... – Marc Jérusalmi
Mother tongue: English Joined: November 30, 2006 Location: France
RE: Do you still use traditional dictionaries?
Originally written by Maxi Schwarz-Bastami on August 2, 2009 12:40 PM
I found a use for the old super-thick Harrap's that I had to buy way back around 1973. It is just the right height to elevate my monitor to a good eye level, and instantly relieved back strain. Apparently you can't look at the screen of flat tops at an angle. The old dictionary with its red simulated leather and gold print gives a sophisticated air and a splash of colour.
Maxi
Well, the bad news is that a 1973 Harraps dictionary should have been donated to a charity shop no later than 1979, At that time, you are unlikely to have had a computer monitor to prop up.
Paper dictionaries are not only easier on your eyes, they give you extra information that on-line or CD dictionaries don't, they enable you to browse a page, when unexpected interesting information can be gleaned - computer ones tend only to give you information you have deliberately searched for (if you are lucky), Paper dictionaries feel nice to use, I like turning the pages and picking them up off the floor gives me useful exercise. Sometimes, I actually have to get up and go to another room to find one: exercise and a change of scene!
As I translate French to English, I use French and UK English monolingual dictionaries (Robert, Collins and Chambers) a bi-lingual dictionary (Collins-Robert). I use a collection of monolingual and bi-lingual specialist dictionaries on engineering, building, and law. I also use Roget's thesaurus. All of these are paper dictionaries and I aim to replace them every five to six years. I also use various on-line dictionaries including IATA, GDT, but find that my on-line searches tend not necessarily to be directed to dictionaries.
[Edited by Barbara Finch on October 18, 2009 5:06 PM]
Dictionary Day - also known as Noah Webster’s Birthday - was Oct. 16, and throughout the English-speaking world, small children placed their dictionary stands by the hearthstone, hoping that Noah himself would magically come down the chimney and leave them a shiny new dictionary (left open to the word “dictionary,” of course). In some places, Dictionary Day is celebrated with bonfires of the past years’ dictionaries, the baking of the traditional aardvark-shaped cookies, and the singing of etymology carols.
No? That didn’t happen in your household? I’m a lexicographer, and it didn’t happen in mine, either. ...
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Why is it that so many people choose to keep old dictionaries?
Dictionary Day - also known as Noah Webster’s Birthday - was Oct. 16, and throughout the English-speaking world, small children placed their dictionary stands by the hearthstone, hoping that Noah himself would magically come down the chimney and leave them a shiny new dictionary (left open to the word “dictionary,” of course). In some places, Dictionary Day is celebrated with bonfires of the past years’ dictionaries, the baking of the traditional aardvark-shaped cookies, and the singing of etymology carols.
This is a great idea, because some dictionaries really deserve to be burnt.
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