English etymological dictionary
[DOC File]Etymology of 'paradise','dough','fiction'
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Skeat, W. Walter - (1967) A Concise Etymological Dictionary of the English Language. [Oxford at the Clarendon Press, 1882, 1967]. Partridge, Eric - (1959) ORIGINS ; A short etymological Dictionary of Modern English [Routledge&Kegan Paul, London]. ...
[DOC File]Atkins, B
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Harvey, K., & Yuill, D. (1997) A study of the use of a monolingual pedagogical dictionary by learners of English when engaged in writing. Applied Linguistics, 18(3), …
[DOC File]Etymology of Statistical and Probabilistic Terms
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The Oxford English Dictionary says: French martingale is attested earliest in the phrase chausses a la martingale hose that fasten at the back (1491); cf. Occitan braias à la martegala hose that fasten at the back, and Italian martingala (a1556; also 1598 in sense 1 [the horse-harness]), Spanish martingala (1529) in the same sense.
[DOCX File]Interpreting a Dictionary Entry - anderson.k12.ky.us
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Interpret a dictionary entry using the following steps: Pronounce the word in syllables using the diacritical marks as a guide. Note the part or parts of speech of the word and any related words. Read the definitions. Check the etymological reference to see if you can find remnants of the meaning of the originating word in the meaning of the entry.
[DOCX File]Copeland-English-Hittite Dictionary, with Concordance
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stated purpose of her Hittite-English Dictionary: “This dictionary is a raw draft based on Alwin Kloekhorst's Etymological Dictionary of the Hittite Inherited Lexicon. The aim is to create a dictionary that contains Hittite words with the correct pronunciation.” I applaud Liberian ’s. effort.
[DOC File]Desidero - luizArt
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A friend showed me her copy of A Short Etymological Dictionary of Modern English by Eric Partirdge where I looked up the word Desire again. It told me that "Desire, n. comes from OF-MF desir, itself from desirer, whence 'to desire': and desirer comes from L. desiderare, (orig in augury) to cease to see, regret the absence of, hence to seek, to
[DOC File]Early Modern English
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Nathaniel Bailey's An Universal Etymological English Dictionary (1721) and Dictionarium Britannicum (1730), 48000 entries, first modern lexicographer, ordinary words, etymologies, cognate forms, stress placement . Samuel Johnson's A Dictionary of the English Language (1755), 40,000 entries, illustrative quotations, model for OED
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