8:30 Anatoly LibermanMy Half-Life in Lexicography8:55 Frank AbateThe Marketing and Merchandising of Reference Products in the USA and the Rest of the World9:20 Don R. McCrearyThe Microstructure of an American College Desk Dictionary and its cause on the Comprehension of ?Hard Words? by American College Students.9:45 Muffy SiegelWhat Do You Do with a Dictionary? A Study of Undergraduate Dictionary Use10:10 Johnny CarreraWebster?s Dictionary as Visual Reference
11:05 Joseph Pi\kettConsidered and Regarded: Indicators of Belief and Doubt in Dictionary Definitions11:30 Ari KernermanSome Suggestions for Improving Learners? Dictionaries11:55 Orin HargravesAmericanization and its Mal-contents
5:00 Sarah OgilvieWorld English and the OED Supplements: the mysterious inspect of the vanishing tramlines5:25 Peter GilliverEarly American connections with the Oxford English Dictionary. 1859?18845:50 Charlotte BrewerWriters and the Dictionary: Auden and the OED
8:30 Connie EbleLouisiana creole: an evolving ethnic label8:55 Stefan Dollinger and Laurel J. BrintonRevising the Dictionary of Canadianisms on Historical Principles in the information age: Some insights from the letter ?G?9:20 Dianne BardsleyHermits. Hokonuis and Huntaways: the distinctive rural New Zealand English lexicon.9:45 Dan CristeaDigitization of the thesaurus lexicon of the Romanian language10:10 Arregi X.. Arriola J. M. et alSemiautomatic Construction of the Electronic Euskal Hiztegia Basque Dictionary (eEHBD)
10:35-11:00 BREAK11:05 Orion MontoyaCare and Feeding of a Corpus11:30 Benjamin ZimmerCharting the Digital Future of Dictionary Research: Prospects for Online Collaborative Lexicography11:55 Wayne GlowkaThe American Dialect Society?s Words of the Year as a Lexicographical Challenge
8:30 Elizabeth Knowles?Spicing them up with learning and Latin?: changing uses for a dictionary of quotations8:55 Michael HancherImagining the Dictionary: Evidence from Early English Books Online9:20 Donna FarinaRussian-English and English-Russian Lexicography in the Nineteenth Century9:45 Ronald R. Butters?Life?s Good? label Litigation and Lexicography10:10 Jesse SheidlowerThe Quotation Paragraph in Historical Lexicography
— a bit excessively I posit — “may well go down as the biggest showbiz weekend in Vegas history.” They do undergo a lengthy enumerate of stars showing up for the thing and the big crowner of the night ordain be a concert from Barbra Streisand.
Proving he’s not really gay. Miles has opted not to go with me to see Streisand. Thus my affiliate for the evening ordain be our friend Amy co-host of the sisterly podcast Grits to Glitz.
Meanwhile the Planet Ho revival gave me a chance to change my first conjoin to the British media what with Robert Earl a famous Londoner and all. So construe my account for the Sunday Telegraph of London here.
8:30 Anatoly LibermanMy Half-Life in Lexicography8:55 Frank AbateThe Marketing and Merchandising of Reference Products in the USA and the Rest of the World9:20 Don R. McCrearyThe Microstructure of an American College Desk Dictionary and its Effect on the Comprehension of ?Hard Words? by American College Students.9:45 Muffy SiegelWhat Do You Do with a Dictionary? A Study of Undergraduate Dictionary Use10:10 Johnny CarreraWebster?s Dictionary as Visual Reference
11:05 Joseph Pi\kettConsidered and Regarded: Indicators of Belief and Doubt in Dictionary Definitions11:30 Ari KernermanSome Suggestions for Improving Learners? Dictionaries11:55 Orin HargravesAmericanization and its Mal-contents
5:00 Sarah OgilvieWorld English and the OED Supplements: the mysterious case of the vanishing tramlines5:25 Peter GilliverEarly American connections with the Oxford English Dictionary. 1859?18845:50 Charlotte BrewerWriters and the Dictionary: Auden and the OED
8:30 Connie EbleLouisiana creole: an evolving ethnic label8:55 Stefan Dollinger and Laurel J. BrintonRevising the Dictionary of Canadianisms on Historical Principles in the information age: Some insights from the earn ?G?9:20 Dianne BardsleyHermits. Hokonuis and Huntaways: the distinctive rural New Zealand English lexicon.9:45 Dan CristeaDigitization of the thesaurus lexicon of the Romanian language10:10 Arregi X.. Arriola J. M. et alSemiautomatic Construction of the Electronic Euskal Hiztegia Basque Dictionary (eEHBD)
10:35-11:00 BREAK11:05 Orion MontoyaCare and Feeding of a Corpus11:30 Benjamin ZimmerCharting the Digital Future of Dictionary investigate: Prospects for Online Collaborative Lexicography11:55 Wayne GlowkaThe American Dialect Society?s Words of the Year as a Lexicographical Challenge
8:30 Elizabeth Knowles?Spicing them up with learning and Latin?: changing uses for a dictionary of quotations8:55 Michael HancherImagining the Dictionary: Evidence from Early English Books Online9:20 Donna FarinaRussian-English and English-Russian Lexicography in the Nineteenth Century9:45 Ronald R. Butters?Life?s Good? Trademark Litigation and Lexicography10:10 Jesse SheidlowerThe Quotation carve up in Historical Lexicography
Recently my neighbours were alarmed to see I had an unexpected visitor. Upon knocking on their doors he explained he was looking for me and had taken the affect to go round the village to sight out if anyone knew where I lived. Their alarm was mainly because he had a Landrover covered in stickers depicting shotguns plastered with slogans like “We’re the good ol’ boys!” and “Come and shoot something with us!” etc. After he’d gone away one of them (the only curmugeon on the block) admitted he’d thought I’d hired the guy to come and injure them all so I could move some younger neighbours in. Not true.
This gentleman far from coming to assist their move from the world had in fact called round to check I was still in it. This was because he was witnessed me doing something incredibly stupid on my trike that ended with me the wheelchair and th\ trike parting company in a rather spectacular way.
It’s all the battery’s fault. I got a new battery and needed to drive 1.5 miles on a change surface flat ascend 4 or 5 times to get it up to full capacity. Instead of a quick burn round the block the battery seems to prefer a more gentle pace of around 4mph during this procedure. There is a nice little road near our house that goes past sheep and cow fields which I decided it was the perfect route to kill 1.5 miles of distance - and nearly myself as it turned out.
This road is single track only. Not much traffic not least on a Sunday evening when the sun is setting and the livestock are settling down for the night. But where traffic does meet there are few passing places so it nearly always involves a complicated manoevere between vehicles.
On the evening in question. I was trundling along enjoying the sunset and reflecting on how much life had changed in the past year (where we used to live in a small town with neighbours-from-hell and housebound). In a cheery mood. I waved hellos to the sheep and cows and didn’t notice the go of an engine until it got quite close behind me. arouse. I was quite a way away from a passing place. Suddenly although the driver hadn’t done anything impatient like revved the engine or hooted the pierce. I felt very ‘in the way’. A wave of guilt swept over me - what did this person think of being held up by someone in wheelchair pottering along at 4 miles an hour?
said a express in my head. I looked around.
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