The Dictionary People" Review: Word-Loving Nerds
Sarah Ogilvie’s The Dictionary People tells the story of the people who built the Oxford English Dictionary by collecting words, quotations, and regional usages. Ogilvie, a linguist, shows that the OED was not made by a single team in isolation but by thousands of volunteers who sent slips of paper and examples from newspapers, books, and everyday speech. The book explains how this wide network of contributors helped record English across time and place.
Ogilvie highlights the odd settings and personalities behind that work: an iron shed repurposed as a scriptorium, volunteers in gowns at meetings, and contributors ranging from convicted criminals to university professors. She follows how these collectors hunted obscure words and illustrative quotations and how their efforts captured English’s multicultural growth. The narrative emphasizes the passionate, sometimes messy labor involved in documenting a living language.
Quelle: theguardian.com ↗
Jede Verschwörungstheorie heftet eine:n Schuldige:n und ein Motiv an dasselbe Ereignis. Aus demselben Ereignis lassen sich beliebig viele Theorien bauen — andere Schuldige, andere Motive. Genau daran erkennt man Verschwörungstheorien: Dasselbe Ereignis lässt sich auf beliebig viele Arten „erklären“.
Du gehst durch die vier Schritte auf je einem Bildschirm — mit einer Auflösung neben jedem Schritt.