A project to digitize and edit the papers of Sir James A. H. Murray, first chief editor of the Oxford English Dictionary. Pilot phase funded by BA/Leverhulme.
#OTD in 1915 James Murray died aged 78. He was working on the OED until the last. Our Gallery has a photo of him and his staff in the Scriptorium taken just 16 days before his death: https://t.co/X5qO58JLJ8
If you want to read more about some of the women who worked on the OED, we have a commentary on that…
https://t.co/V7B5KS5cAR
…as well as a few photos of them in our gallery: https://t.co/xf78TT0X9U
New on Language: a feminist guide: a post about the history of women's words, inspired by @Stylisticienne's book Mother Tongue and Pip Williams's novel The Dictionary of Lost Words https://t.co/n5LMIIRXE3
John Stephen Farmer, a Victorian spiritualist, also wrote a seven-volume dictionary of slang. In 1891, he told Murray he was suing his dictionary’s printers for refusing to typeset certain obscene words that occurred under the letters C and F. (He lost.) https://t.co/C56EpTe2BP
Happy birthday to us! https://t.co/OOm9T89Za0 launched a year ago today. We don’t know whether there’s a technical word for a 1st anniversary, but here’s Murray writing exasperatedly to someone who wanted to know what a 700th anniversary should be called: https://t.co/9psb5OQDEr
The 4th of July seems as good a day as any to note that in 1883 the poet James Russell Lowell sent Murray a reference to one of the earliest known uses of ‘American’ in English—from a poem by George Herbert published in 1633: https://t.co/HuxHEZKHfj
#OTD in 1840, Elizabeth Wordsworth, first Principal of @lmhoxford, was born. In 1907 she wrote that the @OED was ‘quite a fatal book to open, for one never looks up one word in it without straightway being attracted by several others!’
https://t.co/7tQeoOr9zw
In June 1908, the OED’s Reserve–Ribaldously fascicle was published… after two of the editors, Murray and Craigie, had got into a scrap about how to spell the word RHYME (sorry, RIME).
https://t.co/wjCz8gMEWU
#OTD in 1928 the completion of the OED was celebrated with a banquet for 200 male guests in Goldsmiths’ Hall. A few women were invited to watch from a gallery—but not Ada Murray, widow of the chief editor. She wrote a poignant letter asking to attend.
https://t.co/vjAlhAE5uG
Poet and novelist Thomas Hardy was born #OTD in Dorset in 1840. He would exchange several letters with James Murray about local words used in South West England, including one on EWELEASE, HOGLEASE, and COWLEASE:
https://t.co/28DQ1BYaY8
Henry Bradley, co-editor of the OED, died 100 years ago today. Despite his keen intellect and meticulous scholarship, he was a deeply humble man. Here he is batting aside compliments about the Middle-English Dictionary he found time to revise on the side: https://t.co/CSQe6IqiNs
In May 1893 the OED’s Consignificant–Crouching fascicle was published. It included Murray’s observation that young people had begun to pronounce the noun CONTENT differently from their elders.
Kids today, eh?
https://t.co/W1jtyK7Dl6
OED1 was based on evidence drawn from written sources of all kinds, but some contributors preferred quotations from an elite (male) literary canon. #OTD in 1883, HH Gibbs aired his views on taking quotes from writers of popular novels (many of them women): https://t.co/6FAEOsAoak
Shakespeare died #OTD 407 years ago. In 1880, Constance Pott, a proponent of the theory that Francis Bacon was the real author of Shakespeare’s plays, wrote to Murray about similarities she’d found between the two writers’ vocabularies… https://t.co/yf2cTSarDS
#ShakespeareDay
Today is a very special anniversary. #OTD in 1877, Henry Sweet sent a letter to Oxford University Press proposing that they publish what would become the Oxford English Dictionary. You can read the proposal here: https://t.co/LgIrd6A2oB
Murray spent many hours writing to authors to find out why they’d used a particular word. In 1901 he joked that the standard response he got was: ‘I have really forgotten… what terrible people you dictionary fellows are, hunting us up about every word’. https://t.co/cNgFvIHoSA
#OTD in 1837 the poet Algernon Charles Swinburne was born. In 1897, Murray wrote to ask him if he’d ever used the word HARVESTRY, as another dictionary had claimed. Swinburne replied, ‘I suppose I must have done so, if lexicographers say so…’ https://t.co/3jUwRouGjc
‘Oh be joyful!’ The medievalist Lucy Toulmin Smith—later the 1st Librarian of @HMCOxford—published a ground-breaking edition of the York Mystery Plays in 1885. Here, she writes to Murray about her joy at getting access to the manuscript https://t.co/ktNNQ6l7xY #WomensHistoryMonth
Edith Thompson (1848–1929) was the author of History of England, a popular Victorian schoolbook. She was also one of the OED’s most dedicated contributors. In 1882 she empathized with Murray about the need ‘to keep a book short’: https://t.co/ymj44mkiYh #WomensHistoryMonth
In March 1897 the OED’s Flexuosity–Foister fascicle was published. It included one of the longest words in English: FLOCCINAUCINIHILIPILIFICATION. Read about editor Henry Bradley’s frustration at fitting it into the dictionary: https://t.co/i7sO1grtSQ