Cuprins
Contents: John Considine, Du Cange: Lexicography and the Medieval Heritage. – Reiko Takeda, Cambridge, Trinity College Library MS O.5.4: A 15th Century Pedagogical Dictionary? – Ian Lancashire, Lexicography in the Early Modern Period: the Manuscript Record. – Olga Karpova, Author’s Lexicography with Special Reference to Shakespeare Dictionaries. – Natascia Leonardi, An Analysis of a 17th Century Conceptual Dictionary: John Wilkins’ and William Lloyd’s »An Alphabetical Dictionary«. – Rowena Fowler, Text and Meaning in Richardson’s Dictionary. – Joan Beal, An Autodidact’s Lexicon: Thomas Spence’s »Grand Repository of the English Language«. – Julie Coleman, The 3rd Edition of Grose’s »Classical Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue«. – Werner Hüllen, Roget’s Thesaurus, deconstructed. – Thora van Male, From Incipit to Iconophor. – Maria Pilar-Perea, The History of the »Diccionari Català-Valencià-Balear«. – Gregory James, Culture and the Dictionary: Evidence from the 1st European Lexicographical Work in China. – Antonette di Paolo Healey, Polysemy and the DOE. – Robert E. Lewis, Aspects of Polysemy in the MED. – Eric Stanley, Polysemy and Synonymy and how these Concepts were Understood from the 18th Century onwards in Treatises, and Applied in Dictionaries of English. – Tania Styles, Culinary Exchanges: an Investigation of the Etymologies of some Loanwords in OED3. – Marijke Mooijaart, Citations in the »Woordenboek der Nederlandsche Taal«. – Norman Blake, Ordering a Historical Dictionary: the Example of Shakespeare’s Informal English.