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People seem to think that nothing in the world is less interesting than dictionary-making. But this is a
mistake.
Dictionary-making is in fact an interesting job and interesting people are attracted to it.
One of these interesting people was Dr. Samuel Johnson who produced his dictionary on April 15, 1755. In
Dr. Samuel Johnson's days, dictionary-making was different from what it is now. It was a one-man
operation. Dr. Johnson had some help with his, but it was his dictionary. And a number of men in his era,
including two actors, published dictionaries on their own. Another differenca was that these men
themselves tried to decide what was to ba Included and what not.
The modern dictionary-maker is more scientific. All words get his attention and he tries to include the
words people use and show how they use them, and what these words mean.
The dictionary-maker of today has to keep his dictionary up-to-date. A fast-changing world creates a
fast-changing language — new words for new tools, new weapons, new processes, new fields (such as
automation), new ideas. Many new words win places in dictionaries as permanent words. Sometimes words
are included for a time and dropped out in new editions. Today more than ever dictionary-making is a job
for a scientist who knows not only books but the world around him.
Although the one-man dictionary is a thing of history, the number of men in the United States today who
are dictionary-makers is still very few. Perhaps not more than half a dozen. These experts, however, are
able to do their job by finding other experts to help them. One of the above-mentioned halfdozen says that
he had to call in about 350 other specialists in various fields during the work on the American College
Dictionary, one of the several new dictionaries that have appeared since the Second World War. In this age
of growing knowledge no man is able to do the job alone without the aid of other scientists.
A great event in all dictionary-making was the appearance of the Oxford English Dictionary, which the
general public  seldom sees. It is complete in more than twenty volumes. It contains 414,825 words and
1,827,306 quotations which show the use of the words. To give one example: the word and letter "A" are
explained in eleven and a half columns of small type.