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Concise Oxford Dictionarybest-selling one-volume desktop reference Choosing a dictionary can be very much a matter of personal taste, but the Concise Oxford has several features which have always made it a great favourite with writers.
Full explanations of pronunciation, inflexion, and historical derivation are offered in a systematic manner, and the latest edition also includes a wide range of abbreviations. Another welcome feature (added as a result of reader-demand) is guidance on matters of disputed and controversial usage. Now you can be warned about that possible non-PC faux-pas (both included) - and it also shows the differences for spellings in American English. I've actually got two copies: one old and battered with use which has been on the bookshelf for years; the other a recent edition which was a present to my office when I moved here. The critic Cyril Connolly once said that if you knew all the words in the Oxford Concise, you would have a big enough vocabulary to be civilized, fluent, and literate. The jacket-cover advert isn't exaggerating when it says "The world's favourite". If you only have room for a single dictionary, it should be this one. © Roy Johnson 2000 [more REFERENCE books] Concise Oxford English Dictionary (11th edn) 2004, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp.1728, ISBN 0199548412 |
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