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The ‘New Historiography,’ the History of French and ‘Le Bon Usage’ in Nicot’s Dictionary (1606)

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Cultures, Ideologies, and the Dictionary
This chapter is in the book Cultures, Ideologies, and the Dictionary

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents vii
  3. Preface xi
  4. Acknowledgements xiii
  5. Ladislav Zgusta: The Illinois Years xv
  6. Bibliography of Publications xxiii
  7. Introduction lxv
  8. PART I. CONTEXTUALIZING CULTURE
  9. Otomí Culture from Dictionary Illustrative Sentences 3
  10. Un Film, Deux Linguistes et Quelques Dictionnaires. Un Regard Particulier sur Simple Mortel de Pierre Jolivet 9
  11. Dictionaries as Culturally Constructed and as Culture-Constructing Artifacts: The Reciprocity View as Seen from Yiddish Sources 29
  12. Allusions Littéraires et Citations Historiques dans le Trésor de la Langue Française 35
  13. Towards a Theory of the Cultural Dictionary 41
  14. The Spindle or the Distaff 53
  15. The Principal Categories of Learnèd Words 61
  16. Lexical Cosmetics 69
  17. PART II. LEXICOGRAPHY IN HISTORICAL CONTEXT
  18. The Roots of Sixteenth-Century Mesoamerican Lexicography 75
  19. The Current State of Chinese Lexicography 89
  20. The ‘New Historiography,’ the History of French and ‘Le Bon Usage’ in Nicot’s Dictionary (1606) 103
  21. On Chi̓-nam Ngọc-âm Gia̓̓i-nghĩa: An Early Chinese-Vietnamese Dictionary 119
  22. Chaucer and Lydgate in Palsgrave’s Lesclarcissement 127
  23. PART III. IDEOLOGY, NORMS AND LANGUAGE USE
  24. Political Considerations on Spanish Dictionaries 143
  25. Marrism and Soviet Lexicography 153
  26. Florence like Athens and Italian like Greek: An Ideologically Biased Theme in the Forewords of Some Italian Thesauri of the 19th Century 171
  27. Dictionaries and Ideologies: Three Examples from Eastern Europe 181
  28. Philippine Regionalism versus Nationalism and the Lexicographer 197
  29. PART IV. PLURICENTRICITY AND ETHNOCENTRICISM
  30. British and American Biases in English Dictionaries 205
  31. One Language, Two Ideologies, and Two Dictionaries: The Case of Korean 213
  32. Worldview and Verbal Senses 223
  33. De la Soumission à la Prise de Parole: Le Cheminement de la Lexicographie au Québec 237
  34. Taking It For Granted: Some Cultural Preconceptions in English Dictionaries 253
  35. PART V. DICTIONARIES ACROSS LANGUAGES AND CULTURES
  36. Lexical Exponents of Cultural Contact: Speech Act Verbs in Hindi-English Dictionaries 261
  37. The Bilingual Dictionary in Cross-Cultural Contexts 275
  38. PART VI. LANGUAGE DYNAMICS vs. PRESCRIPTIVISM
  39. The Learner’s Dictionary in a Changing Cultural Perspective 283
  40. Dictionaries and the Dynamics of Language Change 297
  41. Dictionaries for the People or for People? 315
  42. PART VII. LANGUAGE LEARNER AS THE CONSUMER
  43. Learners’ Dictionaries: Keeping the Learner in Mind 329
  44. PART VIII. STRUCTURING SEMANTICS
  45. The Dictionary as Philosophy: Reconstructing the Meaning of Our Father 341
  46. Meaning as Derived from Word Formation in South American Indian Languages 353
  47. How Many Meanings to a Word? 357
  48. PART IX. ETHICAL ISSUES AND LEXICOLOGISTS’ BIASES
  49. When Religion Intrudes into Etymology (On The Word: The Dictionary That Reveals The Hebrew Source of English) 369
  50. Culture-Bound and Trapped by Technology: Centuries of Bias in the Making of Wordbooks 381
  51. PART Χ. TERMINOLOGY ACROSS CULTURES
  52. Amharic Lexicography and the Dynamics of Sociopolitical Terminology 393
  53. Grammatical Indications in Chinese Monolingual Dictionaries 401
  54. PART XI. AFTERWORD
  55. Afterword: Directions and Challenges 417
  56. Notes on Contributors 425
  57. Abstracts, Résumés, and Zusammenfassungen 431
  58. Backmatter 459
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