Conspiracy Generator
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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.

Source: theguardian.com

Step 3 of 3Now pick the conspirators

Who did it? And what's their angle?

Every conspiracy theory pins one culprit and one motive on the same story. The same story can spawn any number of theories — different culprits, different motives. That's part of how you spot a conspiracy theory: the same event can be "explained" any number of ways.

Culprit
Culprit

Headed by figures like Vitalik Buterin and Tim Draper, this society purportedly controls the world of cryptocurrency, wielding financial power and influence.

Motive
Motive

Harnessing the potential of time travel, the Society delves into the past to uncover obscured narratives and forgotten chronicles from various civilizations. Their quest leads to the revival of profound advancements in fields like science, medicine, and technology that had been lost to the annals of time.

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