TheConcise Oxford English Dictionary (officially titledThe Concise Oxford Dictionary until 2002, and widely abbreviatedCOD orCOED) is one of the best-known of the 'smaller' Oxforddictionaries. The latest edition contains over 240,000 entries and 1,728 pages ("concise" compared to theOED at over 21,000 pages). Its 12th edition, published in 2011, is used by both theUnited Nations (UN) andNATO as the current authority for spellings in documents in English for international use.[1][2] It is available as ane-book for a variety ofhandheld device platforms.[citation needed] In addition to providing information for general use, it documents local variations such asUnited States andUnited Kingdom usage.
It was started as a derivative of theOxford English Dictionary (OED), although section S–Z had to be written before theOxford English Dictionary reached that stage. However, starting from the 10th edition, it is based on theOxford Dictionary of English (ODE) rather than theOED.[citation needed] The most recent edition is the 12th, published in 2011.
1st Edition (1911):The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Current English, adapted by H. W. Fowler and F. G. Fowler ... from theOxford Dictionary. (They wrote the last section S–Z before theOxford English Dictionary had reached that stage.)
2nd Edition (1929):The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Current EnglishH. W. Fowler alone (his brother had died in 1918, although his name is still on the title page).
3rd Edition: (1934) was revised by H. W. Fowler and H. G. Le Mesurier.
4th (1951) and 5th (1964) Editions were revised by E. McIntosh, who introduced the space-savingswung dash that stands for the headword. The title page still readThe Concise Oxford Dictionary of Current English; but the description read 'edited by H. W. Fowler andF. G. Fowler; based on The Oxford Dictionary'.
6th (1976) and 7th (1982) Editions were still calledThe Concise Oxford Dictionary of Current English, but the subtitle now readbased on theOxford English dictionary and its supplements first edited by H.W. Fowler and F.G. Fowler. It was (thoroughly) edited by J.B. Sykes, catching up with the developments in the parent dictionary. In the 7th Edition, symbols were introduced to mark uses considered controversial or offensive.
8th Edition (1990):The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Current English, first edited by H. W. Fowler and F. G. Fowler was edited by Robert E. Allen. Being computer-based, this edition changed the original structure to a large extent.
9th Edition (1995):The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Current English First edited by H. W. Fowler and F. G. Fowler. Edited by Della Thompson.
1st Edition 100th Anniversary Edition (2011):The Concise Oxford Dictionary The 1911 First Edition includes the photocopied version of the 1st Edition dictionary, an introductory essay by renowned language expertDavid Crystal, a timeline of the chronology through 100 years of COED.
10th Edition (1999, revised 2001) becameThe Concise Oxford English Dictionary. It was edited by Judy Pearsall. Rather than being a direct revision of the 9th edition, it was based on the largerNew Oxford Dictionary of English (1998), which Pearsall had edited. Its compilation had involved a re-analysis of much of the core vocabulary using theBritish National Corpus. The 10th edition was also issued as an electronic resource, as a computer optical disc.
This edition was to be the lastConcise Oxford Dictionary to be used onCountdown, as contestant Helen Wrigglesworth[3] declared ROADSIDE[4] and it was declared illegal. After further inspection fromMark Nyman, the dictionary was found to not have any compound words in it,[5] and was thus abandoned and the show reverted to the 9th edition.[6] The show switched toNew Oxford Dictionary of English in series 43.
11th Edition (2004, revised 2006, 2008 and 2009), theConcise Oxford English Dictionary was edited by Catherine Soanes and Angus Stevenson. It was based on theOxford Dictionary of English (2nd edition (2003), which Soanes and Stevenson had edited).[citation needed] The 11th Edition is available on CD-ROM as an e-book for a variety of platforms.
12th Edition (2011), theConcise Oxford English Dictionary was edited by Angus Stevenson and Maurice Waite. This edition included 400 new entries, includingsexting,cyberbullying,gastric band,jeggings,retweet, andwoot.[7] Includes 240,000 words, phrases, and definitions; with vocabulary covering technical and scientific vocabulary and international English. It was typeset inFrutiger and Parable typefaces. The CD-ROM version includes 50,000 spoken audio pronunciations, and supports Windows 2000 and above, Mac OS X 10.1 and above.
It is a compilation of bothConcise Oxford American Dictionary andConcise Oxford American Thesaurus.
?th[clarification needed] edition: Dictionary includes over 180,000 entries and definitions; Thesaurus includes over 12,000 main entries and over 350,000 synonyms.
Android 2.2 version sold by Amazon Digital Services LLC. Published by MobiSystems.
Australian Concise Oxford Dictionary contains entries from contemporary Australian and international English. Edited by Bruce Moore, it incorporates entries fromOxford English Dictionary,Concise Oxford Dictionary, and theAustralian National Dictionary.
Concise Oxford English-Chinese Dictionary (牛津現代英漢雙解大詞典/牛津现代英汉双解大词典) is published by Foreign Language Teaching and Research Press in China.[citation needed] Online version became available in 2011.[8]
Extended Edition (牛津现代英汉双解词典增补版) (ISBN7-5600-4645-2): Includes 130,000 headwords, about 1000 usage examples.
It is a two-way dictionary. Chinese translations are in simplified Chinese, with traditional Chinese used in comments. Chinese pronunciation is in Mandarin.
It is a version ofOxford Concise English-Chinese Chinese-English Dictionary published by The Commercial Press. Publication deal between Oxford University Press and The Commercial Press was approved in 1983.[9]
It is an electronic version of Concise Oxford-Duden German Dictionary.
1st? edition (ISBN0-19-861339-3/ISBN978-0-19-861339-8): Includes over 150,000 words and phrases, 250,000 translations. Supports Windows 95. iFinger Pop-up supports Internet Explorer.
Windows CD-ROM version (Concise Oxford Duden German Dictionary MSDict Electronic Version) (ISBN097974574-8/ISBN978-097974574-4): Published by Mobile Systems. Supports Windows XP.
4th edition: Includes over 175,000 words and phrases, and 240,000 translations. Also includes new words and phrases based on findings from Oxford's English and Spanish language Reading Programmes