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Sources for Dictionaries and Language Resources
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Contents | Return to Expanded Table of Contents A
guide to world language dictionaries. Dalby, Andrew. Chicago:
Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers, 1998. UIUC Call Number: Main Reference
Collection 016.43 D15g While
a highly selective source, this annotated bibliography is a rich compilation of
the World's dictionaries. The compiler has sought to include those dictionaries
that have retained their importance for scholarly research despite their age.
Titles included here document the vocabulary they list, they include word origins,
cite sources of information. The compiler has also included tables providing the
alphabetical order for each language. Entries are arranged alphabetically, cross-references
are indicated in small capitals. Each language section opens with a description
of where the language is spoken, the approximate number of speakers, the language
family and a listing of other closely related languages. Those languages with
more than 6 dictionary entries have a subject arrangement: "Historical dictionaries";
"The modern standard"; "Older periods"; "Regional forms";
"Slang and special vocabularies"; "Etymological dictionaries".
The example pictured here is taken from the Polish section on Regional forms.The
volume includes an index of names and titles.
The Slavonic languages.
Comrie, Bernard and Greville G. Corbett. New York: Routledge, 1993 UIUC
Call Number: General Slavic Reference 491.8 Sl1633 This
is a general guide to the Slavonic languages with an emphasis on their linguistic
features. For those looking for a general introduction to these languages this
is a very good source and includes a basic bibliography on each language. For
each language there is a transliteration table. All languages have introductory
sections, a discussion of phonology, a section on morphology, one on syntax, another
on vocabulary and a final discussion on dialects. For those
beginning research in an unfamiliar language this can be a very useful source.
Certainly, it is one that librarians can find very helpful when having to work
with Slavic languages that are outside their main area of expertise.
Grammars
and dictionaries of the Slavic languages from the Middle Ages up to 1850. An annotated
bibliography.
Stankiewicz, Edward. New York: Mouton Publishers, 1984. 190 p.
UIUC Call Number: General Slavic Reference 016.4918 St2g For
those working on linguistic questions or texts that date from the middle ages
through the first half of the 19th century, this is an excellent guide to that
most essential of reference works, the dictionary. The work also serves as a history
of grammatical study in the West and East for the period. Stankiewicz has included
grammars and dictionaries for Czech, Slovak, Polish, Sorbian, Bulgarian, Croatian,
Serbian, Slovene, Russian and Ukrainian. The entries are grouped into regional
sections for West, South and East Slavic. Within each of these sections the references
are separated into sections on grammars and dictionaries. The entries tend to
have concise annotations and the volume is liberally cross-referenced (see below).
The volume includes a lengthy secondary bibliography organized by language. There
is an index of authors and a list of cities with variant name.
Stankewicz, Edward Grammars and dictionaries of the Slavic
languages from the Middle Ages up to 1850. p.72
Bibliographie der
Worterbucher. Warszaw: Wydawnictwa naukowo-techniczne. 1961-1981.
UIUC Call Number: General Slavic Reference
016.03 B471 ; IU holds the following: V.1 1945-1961, V.5:1969-1970, V.6:1971-1972,
V.7:1973-1974, V.8: 1975-1976, v.9,:1977-1978. This
bibliography of Slavic dictionaries has one of the more unusual structures you
will find in a bibliographic resource. The volumes are divided into two main parts,
single-language dictionaries and multi-language dictionaries. These parts have
entries organized by universal dewey number with a two letter code for the language/languages
used in the dictionary. The entries are not annotated. It is listed here as it
covers some years not listed in Lewanski and thus provides a single source for
identifying dictionaries. As with Lewanski the sources included are terminological
dictionaries, encyclopedias, and more standard dictionaries.
Bibliography of Slavic
dictionaries. Lewanski, Richard C. Bologna: Editrice Compositori, 1972,
V.1-4. (Part of World bibliography of dictionaries.) UIUC Call
Number: General Slavic Reference 016.4918 L58b 1972 V.1-4 This
is a source with a variety of uses. The most obvious is as a reference guide to
the published dictionaries for the region. The four volumes are arranged by country,
beginning with volume one devoted completely to Poland. The dictionaries included
are not just language resources. Lewanski has included biographical dictionaries,
encyclopedias, dictionaries, even some bibliographic sources such as Mezer's Slovarnyi
ukazatel po knigovedeniiu (1924) thus it provides access to a number of different
types of sources. The first volume on Poland was intended
as a single study Polish language dictionaries. The coverage of this language
is, to some extent, more complete than those represented in the other volumes.
Volume two is devoted to general Slavic dictionaries, Belorussian, Bulgarian,
Czech, Kashubian, Lusatian, Polabian, Macedonian, Old Church Slavic, Serbocroatian,
Slovak, Slovenian, and Ukrainian. Each section is followed by its own author,
language and subject index. Volume three is devoted to Russian and the final volume
updates the sources in the previous three volumes. Lewanski's
set is a very good starting point. However, the scholar should be aware that the
absence of any annotation makes it difficult to find some of the more valuable
resources. A case in point is the Slovar' sovremennogo russkogo literaturnogo
iazyka published by the Academy of Sciences. This is a valuable resource for
identifying quotations, as well as tracing the origins of terms to their original
literary usage. Using this souce effectively presupposes at least a basic knowledge
of the titles you are seeking as opposed to a subject interest..
Your Dictionary URL:
yourdictionary.com
This site has links to hundredes of foreign language resources
including dictionaries. The site was launched by Bucknell University in 1995 and
has become a standard source for locating dictionaries on the internet. A quick
search of any term is available from the home page. For those seeking more information
it is possible to get a list of all the languages for which there are sources
available from this site. The number and type of sources available vary by language.
For Hungarian there are only 6 dictionaries available, compared with 40 for Russian.
Many of the Russian dictionaries are subject specific like the Dictionary of
ethnographical terms, or are closer to encyclopedias, such as the Dictionary
of Russian biography . This site also has links
to grammars for each language and to information on fonts for each language. It
is a versatile site that provides access to an array of tools for language study.
Languages-on-the-web URL:
www.languages-on-the-web.com
This is a very useful site for a wide range of
sources on the languages of the world. Like yourdictionary.com, it is searchable
by country. Here there are even more language resources. Along with dictionaries
and grammars there are sites on culture, television, radio, newspapers, software,
translators, schools and "interesting sites". Every entry is annotated, most very
briefly. This is a good broad based site for anyone
looking for information on languages. There is also a useful section at the bottom
of the home page on other useful language sites. If you should not find what you
need at this site, you will likely find it on one of those listed in this section.
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