"How does a word get into the
dictionary?"
"How does a word get into the dictionary?" That's the question
Mrs. Granger, the school teacher in Frindle was asked.
The answer is simple: People need to use it. Nick tried just that.
In general,
a word must appear regularly in professionally published sources, such
as books, magazines, and newspapers, before it can be considered as
a candidate to enter the dictionary. Here is some more information
about how dictionary editors choose which words to add, using Merriam-Webster
Dictionary.
“To decide which words to include in the dictionary and to determine
what they mean, Merriam-Webster Dictionary editors study the language
to determine which words people use most often and how they use them.
Each day most Merriam-Webster editors devote an hour or two to reading
books, newspapers, magazines, electronic publications -- in fact a
cross-section of all kinds of published materials; in our office this
activity is called 'reading and marking.' The editors are
looking for new words, new meanings of existing words, evidence of
variant spellings or inflected forms -- in short, anything that might
help in deciding if a word belongs in the dictionary, understanding
what it means, and determining typical usage. Any word of interest
is marked, along with surrounding context that offers insight into
its form and use.
The marked passages are then input into a computer system and stored
both in machine-readable form and on 3" x 5" slips of paper
to create citations.
Each citation has the following elements:
the word itself
an example of the word used in context
bibliographic information about the source from which the word and
example were taken
Merriam-Webster's citation files, which were begun in the 1880s, now
contain nearly 15 million examples of words used in context and cover
all aspects of the English vocabulary. Citations are also available
to editors in a searchable text database (linguists call it a corpus)
that includes 50,000,000 words drawn from a great variety of sources.
How does a word make the jump from the citation file to the dictionary?
The process begins with dictionary editors reviewing groups of citations.
Definers start by looking at citations covering a relatively small
segment of the alphabet -- for example gri- to gro- -- along with the
entries from the dictionary being reedited that are included within
that alphabetical section. It is the definer's job to determine which
existing entries can remain essentially unchanged, which entries need
to be revised, which entries can be dropped, and which new entries
should be added. In each case, the definer decides on the best course
of action by reading through the citations and using the evidence in
them to adjust entries or create new ones.
Before a new word can be added to the dictionary, it must have enough
citations to show that it is widely used. But having a lot of citations
is not enough; in fact, a large number of citations might even make
a word more difficult to define, because many citations show too little
about the meaning of a word to be helpful. A word may be rejected for
entry into a general dictionary if all of its citations come from a
single source or if they are all from highly specialized publications
that reflect the jargon of experts within a single field.
To be included in a Merriam-Webster dictionary, a word must be used
in a substantial number of citations that come from a wide range of
publications over a considerable period of time. Specifically, the
word must have enough citations to allow accurate judgments about its
establishment, currency, and meaning.
The number and range of citations needed to add a word to the dictionary
varies. In rare cases, a word jumps onto the scene and is both instantly
prevalent and likely to last, as was the case in the 1980s with AIDS.
In such a situation, the editors determine that the word has become
firmly established in a relatively short time and should be entered
in the dictionary, even though its citations may not span the wide
range of years exhibited by other words.
The size and type of dictionary also affects how many citations a
word needs to gain admission. Because an abridged dictionary, such
as Merriam-Webster's Collegiate® Dictionary, Tenth Edition, has
fairly limited space, only the most commonly used words can be entered;
to get into that type of dictionary, a word must be supported by a
significant number of citations. But a large unabridged dictionary,
such as Webster's Third New International Dictionary, has room for
many more words, so terms with fewer citations can still be included.
Change and variation are as natural in language as they are in other
areas of human life and Merriam-Webster reference works must reflect
that fact. By relying on citational evidence, we hope to keep our publications
grounded in the details of current usage so they can calmly and dispassionately
offer information about modern English. That way, our references can
speak with authority, without being authoritarian.”
Reproduced with permission from Merriam Webster
