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Read Any Good Dictionaries Lately?
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Jesse,
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I agree that the users of our books read them
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differently than we do. When the Encarta Dictionary of
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English was published last month, the press celebrated the event by listing
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the dictionary's errors, which surely mortified Anne Soukhanov, its editor. I
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don't know if I'll ever get used to people misreading what I write or students
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misinterpreting what I say. But it does happen all the time. I've come to see
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this as a legitimate function of reading and writing. If Gass characterizes
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books as living in the mind, not on the page, he's saying to some extent that
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books are the creation of the reader as well as the writer. I know that when I
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read, I turn the text into a world that is influenced by who I am, what I have
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read or thought up to that point, what's going on in my life or around me. And
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it doesn't matter whether I'm reading the OED or
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Brideshead Revisited (two of my favorite
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reads).
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You mentioned the example of people living in houses
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thinking they can critique houses as if they were architects. Well, not
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everyone can design or build a house, that's true. But you know from your
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experience living in houses that you might have laid out the kitchen
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differently, or put the closet somewhere else, or made one room smaller and
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another larger. Users of dictionaries get to use them any way they want to,
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whether we like it or not. When I ask people how they use their dictionaries,
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they tell me for spelling (now I suppose more and more people just use spell
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checkers for that), or sometimes to look up an unfamiliar word. But to some
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extent they're saying this because they think that's how they're supposed to
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use dictionaries. In fact many people use dictionaries to press flowers, hide
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money, or prop up uneven table legs. Or as booster seats for visiting small
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children. Dictionary editors like you and Anne Soukhanov and Sidney Landau know
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the fine distinctions that exist among dictionaries. But end users often treat
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dictionaries as interchangeable. One popular meaning of the word "Webster's" is
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simply "dictionary." This is an indication of how people lump dictionaries
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together. But I don't think any dictionary--even the Encarta --defines "Webster's" generically as "dictionary." I assume
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that has something to do with trademark worries ("Webster's" is part of the
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name of several dictionaries now), but it may also reflect an unwillingness on
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the part of dictionary makers to admit that the public doesn't discriminate the
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dictionary brands the way marketers would like them to.
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Users of language, like people living in houses, often
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wish things had been designed differently, and they often take a hand in
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remodeling efforts (these may have amateurish effects, or they may be quite
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professional). I like to ask audiences every chance I get, "If you were the
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boss of English, what would you change?" The three most common answers I get
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are still: 1) I'd reform the spelling. 2) I'd get rid of the meaningless
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expression "You know." 3) There's too much swearing.
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The answers are a nice springboard for talking about:
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1) how you go about reforming language, and what limitations you'd face (just
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saying it won't make it so); 2) how expressions like "you know" actually
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function linguistically (people aren't saying "you know" just to annoy you,
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even if that's the effect); and 3) the nature of language etiquette, taboo,
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euphemism, and context. (As Clarence Darrow said in Inherit the Wind , "I don't swear just for the hell of it.")
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But one more thing, to return to William Gass. I
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thought, when I began reading your piece, that you were going to mention the
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future of the book, that is, the question we hear a lot: Will print books be
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replaced by virtual books? I've been thinking about the effects of technology
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on our reading and writing practices, and wonder if that might be something
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you'd want to talk about--and speculate about. I myself see virtual text
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expanding. I don't see us yet curling up with a virtual book, taking a virtual
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book to the beach, browsing through musty used virtual book stores looking for
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that elusive something special. But I do see changes happening everywhere so
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far as reading and writing are concerned, especially in my own literacy
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practice. I'm perfectly comfortable composing at a keyboard. Though I love a
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good fountain pen, I find that every time I have to write by hand on a pad of
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paper, I'm annoyed at the inconvenience, plus my handwriting is shot through
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lack of practice (not that it was very good to begin with). But I'm not yet at
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the point where I'm entirely comfortable reading and editing my writing
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on-screen. I'm getting there, though, and I notice I spend less and less time
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printing things out, editing them at the desk, then keying in corrections.
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That's what I mean by technology affecting our literacy practices.
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So how's by you?
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Dennis
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