Two volumes thick and 2,300 pages long,
Samuel Johnson’s Dictionary,
published in 1755, marked a milestone in a language in desperate need of
standards. No English dictionary before it had devoted so much space to
everyday words, been so thorough in its definitions, or illustrated usage
by quoting from Shakespeare and other great writers.
Johnson’s
Dictionary would define the language for the next
150 years, until the arrival of the
Oxford English Dictionary.
Johnson’s was the dictionary used by Jane Austen and Charles Dickens,
Wordsworth and Coleridge, the Brontës and the Brownings, Thomas Hardy
and Oscar Wilde. Modern dictionaries owe much to Johnson’s work.
This new edition, created by Levenger Press, contains more than 3,100 selections
from the original, including etymology, definitions, and illustrative passages
in their original spelling. Bristling with quotations, the
Dictionary
offers memorable passages on subjects ranging from books and critics to
dreams and ethics. It also features three new indexes created out of entries
in this edition: words found in Shakespeare’s works, words from other
great literary works, and piquant terms used in eighteenth-century discussions
of such topics as law, medicine, and the sexes.
Finally, Johnson’s “Plan of a Dictionary of the English Language,”
seldom seen in print, which he wrote eight years before the
Dictionary,
is reproduced in its entirety. For those who appreciate literature, interpret
the law, and love language, this a browser’s delight—an encyclopedia
of the age and a dictionary for the ages.