Abstract |
This paper investigates the usefulness of television as a source of material for English dictionaries. It describes a project in which 93 television programmes of various types were studied over a period of 51 hours in order to establish how well the CONCISE OXFORD DICTIONARY covers the vocabulary used in them. An analysis of the results showed that nearly every half-hour programme yielded at least 3 items of interest (the average being 5.5 items), and that for the editor of a dictionary such as the COD this material would be most valuable with regard to geographical labelling, regional and non-regional colloquialisms and slang, and new words. The television also proved to be a rich source of idioms, phrases, and specialist vocabulary. |
Keywords |
television, Concise Oxford Dictionary, coverage by dictionaries, specialist terms, regional terms, idioms and phrases, slang and colloquialisms, new words |
BibTex |
@InProceedings{ELX92_2-031, author = {Della Thompson}, title = {Television as a source of material for English dictionaries}, pages = {541-548}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 5th EURALEX International Congress}, year = {1992}, month = {aug}, date = {4-9}, address = {Tampere, Finland}, editor = {Hannu Tommola & Krista Varantola,Tarja Salmi-Tolonen & Jurgen Schopp}, publisher = {Tampereen YIiopisto}, isbn = {951-44-3111-1}, } |