Century Dictionary
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Title page of The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia
The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia was one of the largest and most highly regarded{{Fact|date=September 2008}}
encyclopedic dictionaries of the English language. The first edition was published from
1889 to
1891 by
The Century Company of New York, in six, eight, or ten volume versions (originally issued in 24
fascicles) in 7,046 pages with some 10,000 wood-engraved illustrations. It was edited by Sanskrit scholar and linguist
William Dwight Whitney, with
Benjamin Eli Smith's assistance. It was a great expansion of the smaller
Imperial Dictionary, which in turn had been based on the
1841 edition of
Noah Webster's
American Dictionary. After Whitney's death in
1894, supplementary volumes were published under Smith's supervision, including,
The Century Cyclopedia of Names (
1894) and
The Century Atlas (
1897). A two-volume
Supplement of new vocabulary, published in
1909, completed the dictionary. A reformatted edition,
The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia, was published in
1911 in twelve quarto volumes: ten of vocabulary, plus the volume of names and the atlas. This set went through several printings, the last in 1914. The same year, the ten vocabulary volumes were published as one giant volume, about 8500 pages in a very thin paper. The now much coveted
India paper edition also appeared around this time, usually in 5 double volumes (rarely, in 10 single volumes) plus one additional for the Cyclopedia. The completed dictionary contained over 500,000 entries, more than
Webster's New International or
Funk and Wagnalls New Standard, the largest other dictionaries of the period. Each form of a word was treated separately, and liberal numbers of quotations and additional information were included to support the definitions. In its
etymologies,
Greek words were not
transliterated.
Although the dictionary was never again revised or expanded, an abridged edition with new words,
The New Century Dictionary (edited by H.G. Emery and K.G. Brewster; revision editor, Catherine B. Avery,) was published by Appleton-Century-Crofts of New York in
1927, and reprinted in various forms for over thirty-five years. The
New Century became the basis for the
American College Dictionary, the first
Random House dictionary, in
1947. The three volume
New Century Cyclopedia of Names, an expansion of the
1894 volume, was published in
1954, edited by
Clarence Barnhart. The
Century Dictionary was admired for the quality of its entries, the craftsmanship in its design,
typography, and
binding, and its excellent illustrations. It has been used as an information source for the makers of many later dictionaries, including editors of the
Oxford English Dictionary, who cited it over 2,000 times in the first edition. In 1913, Stewart Archer Steger from the University of Virginia published his Ph.D. dissertation "American Dictionaries" and devoted a 14-page Chapter VI on
Century Dictionary. He concluded the chapter with these words: "Altogether,
The Century Dictionary far surpasses anything in American lexicography".
External links
The complete
Century Dictionary is
available online; it can be searched by the word or viewed by the page in its original form, with zoom-in option.
References
(...as imported from WP)
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