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Samuel Johnson's Dictionary: Defining the English Language

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Date and time
Thursday, January 15, 2004

Jack Lynch, professor of English at Rutgers University, discusses Samuel Johnson's Dictionary. Two volumes thick and 2,300 pages long, Samuel Johnson's *Dictionary of the English Language,* 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 and been so thorough in its definitions. Johnson's was the dictionary used by Jane Austen and Charles Dickens, Wordsworth and Coleridge, the Brontes and the Brownings, Thomas Hardy and Oscar Wilde. This new edition, created by Levenger Press, contains more than 3,100 selections from the original, including 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 from entries in this edition.

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Jack Lynch is a professor of english at Rutgers University and a Johnson scholar, having studied the great lexicographer for nearly a decade. He is the author of *The Age of Elizabeth in the Age of Johnson* (Cambridge University Press) and the editor of *A Bibliography of Johnsonian Studies*, 1986-1998. He has also written journal articles and scholarly reviews addressing Johnson and the 18th century.
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