The Oxford Dictionary of Allusions is a guide to and an explanation of cultural references commonly found in writing and arts of all kinds. It covers major issues from the classical period to contemporary mass media - including cinema and television. Topics are listed thematically - dancing, danger, darkness - and all entries are cross referenced in an index. This is an attractive new publication. There's everything here - from Barbara Cartland to Dido and Aeneas or from Morgan le Fay to Bridget Jones's Diary.
Full review HERE
The Oxford Dictionary of Catchphrases is a compendium of famous sayings and expressions from the world of film, radio, television, and the music hall on both sides of the Atlantic. The sort of thing you might recognise in - Can I do you now, sir?, Shut that door!, Who loves ya, baby?, Bono Estente!, and Eat my shorts!. It offers the original sources for the sayings, as well as fascinating background details about the context and sometimes the history of the performer. Very amusing. Strongly recommended. Full review HERE
The Oxford Dictionary of Euphemisms is much more than a collection of polite expressions. It's also a detailed inventory of slang, sexual code terms, metaphors, evasiveness, underworld argot, and indecent language. Topics hhich invoke euphemism are sex, lavatories, drinking, drugs, crime, and death. The not-so-obvious are commerce, politics, warfare, illness, and ideological belief. Written in a scholarly yet very witty style. Packed with goodies. Strongly recommended.
Full review HERE
The Oxford Dictionary of English Folklore is a compendium of folklore, beliefs, customs, myths, and superstitions. It covers activities such as cheese rolling, Morris dancing, and well dressing; mythical characters such as Robin Hood, Merlin, Beowulf, and father Christmas; what people believe about parts of the body or days of the week; and beliefs associated with simple items such as plants and hedgehogs.
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What is the plural of fez? How should we pronounce millefeuille? And where would you see a strabismus? Words have found their way from many other languages into English. The Oxford Dictionary of Foreign Terms lists 8,000 of them, drawn from over forty countries around the world - from ab origine to mystagogue and zucchetto. Explanations of their meaning in English are given, as well as date or origin, spelling variants, and illustrations of their use in quotations from contemporary sources. Full review
The Oxford Dictionary of Idioms explains the meanings of proverbs, traditional sayings, and metaphorical expressions - such as raining cats and dogs and over the moon. It contains American and Australian as well as UK examples. A date of origin is often given and many entries are supported by illustrative quotations. This will certainly be useful for anybody learning English, as well as for people interested in the oddities of the language. Full review HERE
The Oxford Dictionary of the Internet explains the thousands of new technical terms which have come into use via the Net. Includes newsgroup abbreviations, the language of e-commerce, software technology, security, and the arcane language of hackers, whitehats, and alpha geeks. It gains its strength from concentrating in depth on the Internet and its infrastructure, rather than on general computing terms. Comes with CD-ROM version, containing links.
Full review HERE
The Oxford Dictionary of the Literary Terms explains the difference between an epic poem and a tragedy, between classical and romantic, between naturalism and realism. The entries range from definitions of the absurd to zeugma, and it is in fact
a guide to a mixture of old-fashioned grammatical terms, traditional drama, literary history, and criticism. It contains over 1000 of the most troublesome literary terms you are likely to encounter.
Full review HERE
Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable is an old classic which lists the meanings and origins of common phrases, sayings, and fables. It also covers both real and mythological people and places. Its unique charm - which has kept it a best-seller for more than a hundred years - is that it is based on a solid foundation of the Greek and Roman classics. Much loved by crossword puzzle fans. Once you start reading, it's a difficult book to put down. Full review HERE
The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations
is a compendium of memorable sayings by the witty and famous - from Mae West's Is that a pistol in your pocket, or are you just glad to see me? to Lytton Strachey's pithy last words, If this is dying, I don't think much of it.. Fully cross-referenced. Can serve as a straight work
of reference if you are stuck for the source of a famous quotation. Also useful for bedtime relaxation; and it's the sort of book which some people would keep in the smallest room.
Full review HERE
Roget's Thesaurus is a classic and much-loved reference book. It's a compilation of
synonyms and antonyms - words which mean the same or the opposite of a word you choose.
Most people use it to find alternatives for words which they wish
to avoid repeating. It can save you hours of head-scratching. So popular that it never goes out of print. A great reassurance for anyone who might feel insecure about language matters.
Full review HERE
And now for something completely different ...
Roger's Profanisaurus is a compendium of all the slang words, smut, double entendres, and sex and toilet talk you will ever need - plus a lot more you might not actually
want to know. It's compiled from the pages of VIZ - the very
politically UN-correct comic monthly, and it's hysterically funny. This is
DEFINITELY not for the faint-hearted, but if you understand even half the terms, you'll get full marks for street cred.
Full review HERE
Cassell's Dictionary of Slang is a guide to 'unconventional English' - as slang and swearing is
often called. It contains over 60,000 entries
covering slang from all parts of the English-speaking world, including Britain, North
America, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa,
from Elizabethan times to the present. It
gives definitions for thousands of expressions, ranging from the jargon used by criminals
in Victorian London to the drugs culture of the modern
world, via swear words, rhyming slang, and the
colourful language of sex.
Dictionary for Writers & Editors is a specialist dictionary for writers, journalists, and text-editors. It offers rulings on words and spellings which are commonly problematic (Muslim or Moselm, gypsy or gipsy?); the names of people and places; foreign words and phrases we commonly use (petit-bourgeois); abbreviations; capitalization and
punctuation. Can be used as a quick guide to many niceties of writing (the difference between hyphens and dashes) and as a potted encyclopedia for historical names (and their dates).
Full review HERE