Sub-field Dictionary - Relevant Literature

Relevant Literature

  • Sandro Nielsen: "Contrastive Description of Dictionaries Covering LSP Communication". In: Fachsprache/International Journal of LSP 3-4/1990, 129-136.
Lexicography
Types of reference works
  • Dictionary
  • Glossary
  • Lexicon
  • Thesaurus
Types of dictionaries
  • Bilingual
  • Biographical
  • Conceptual
  • Defining
  • Electronic
  • Encyclopedic
  • Language for specific purposes dictionary
  • Machine-readable
  • Maximizing
  • Medical
  • Minimizing
  • Monolingual learner's
  • Multi-field
  • Phonetic
  • Picture
  • Reverse
  • Rhyming
  • Rime
  • Single-field
  • Specialized
  • Sub-field
  • Visual
Lexicographic projects
  • Lexigraf
  • WordNet
Other
  • List of lexicographers
  • List of online dictionaries
Lexicology
Major terms
  • Lexical item
  • Lexicon
  • Lexis
  • Word
Elements
  • Chereme
  • Glyphs
  • Grapheme
  • Lemma
  • Lexeme
  • Meronymy
  • Morpheme
  • Phoneme
  • Seme
  • Sememe
Semantic relations
  • Antonymy
  • Holonymy
  • Hyponymy
  • Idiom
  • Lexical semantics
  • Semantic network
  • Synonym
  • Troponymy
Functions
  • Function word
  • Headword
Fields
  • Controlled vocabulary
  • English lexicology and lexicography
  • International scientific vocabulary
  • Lexicographic error
  • Lexicographic information cost
  • Linguistic prescription
  • Morphology
  • Specialised lexicography

Read more about this topic:  Sub-field Dictionary

Famous quotes containing the words relevant and/or literature:

    Don’t give your opinions about Art and the Purpose of Life. They are of little interest and, anyway, you can’t express them. Don’t analyse yourself. Give the relevant facts and let your readers make their own judgments. Stick to your story. It is not the most important subject in history but it is one about which you are uniquely qualified to speak.
    Evelyn Waugh (1903–1966)

    Great literature cannot grow from a neglected or impoverished soil. Only if we actually tend or care will it transpire that every hundred years or so we might get a Middlemarch.
    —P.D. (Phyllis Dorothy)