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A Greek–English Lexicon

A Greek–English Lexicon, often referred to as Liddell & Scott (/ˈlɪdəl/)[1] or Liddell–Scott–Jones (LSJ), is a standard lexicographical work of the Ancient Greek language originally edited by Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, Henry Stuart Jones, and Roderick McKenzie and published in 1843 by the Oxford University Press.

A Greek–English Lexicon
Author
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
Published1843 (Oxford University Press)
Media typePrint (hardcover)
PagesApprox. 1,705
ISBN978-0-19-864226-8
483/.21 20
LC ClassPA445.E5 L6 1996

It was most recently revised for its ninth edition of 1940. Abridged versions and a supplement exist. It was initially the basis for the 2021 Cambridge Greek Lexicon, although subsequently that became a complete rewrite from scratch.

Liddell and Scott's lexicon (1843–1940) edit

The lexicon was begun in the 19th century, and is now in its ninth (revised) edition, published in 1940. It was based on the earlier Handwörterbuch der griechischen Sprache by the German lexicographer Franz Passow (first published in 1819, fourth edition 1831), which in turn was based on Johann Gottlob Schneider's Kritisches griechisch-deutsches Handwörterbuch. The Lexicon has served as the basis for all later lexicographical work on the ancient Greek language, such as the ongoing Greek–Spanish dictionary project Diccionario Griego–Español (DGE).

It is now conventionally referred to as Liddell & Scott, Liddell–Scott–Jones, or LSJ, and its three sizes are sometimes referred to as "The Little Liddell", "The Middle Liddell" and "The Big Liddell" or "The Great Scott". The LSJ main edition has 116,502 entries.[2]

According to Stuart Jones's preface to the ninth (1925) edition, the creation of the Lexicon was originally proposed by David Alphonso Talboys, an Oxford publisher. It was published by the Clarendon Press at Oxford rather than by Talboys, who died before the first edition (1843) was complete. The second through seventh editions appeared in 1845, 1849, 1855, 1861, 1869, and 1883.

The first editor of the LSJ, Henry George Liddell, was Dean of Christ Church, Oxford, and the father of Alice Liddell, the eponymous Alice of the writings of Lewis Carroll. The eighth edition (1897) was the last edition published during Liddell's lifetime.

The LSJ is sometimes compared and contrasted with A Latin Dictionary by Lewis and Short, which was also published by Oxford University Press (OUP).[a] It is also sometimes compared[by whom?] with the Bauer lexicon, which is a similar work focused on the Greek of the New Testament.

The LSJ's definitions reflect the Victorian morality of its time. For example, χέζω (chezo, 'to shit'), is translated as "ease oneself, do one's need"; βινέω (bineo, 'to fuck') as "inire, coire, of illicit intercourse"; and λαικάζω (laikazo, 'to suck cocks') as "to wench".[3]

Condensed editions (1843, 1889) edit

Two condensed editions of LSJ were published by Oxford University Press and remain in print.

In 1843, the same year as the full lexicon's publication, A Lexicon: Abridged from Liddell and Scott's Greek–English Lexicon, sometimes called "the Little Liddell" was published. Several revised editions followed. For example, a reprint, re-typeset in 2007, of the 1909 edition is available from Simon Wallenberg Press.[4]

In 1889, an intermediate edition of the lexicon, An Intermediate Greek–English Lexicon, was prepared on the basis of the seventh edition (1883) of LSJ. In comparison to the smaller abridgement, this "Middle Liddell" contains more entries covering the essential vocabulary of most commonly read Ancient Greek literature, adds citations of the authors to illustrate the history of Greek usage (without identifying the passages), and provides more help with irregular forms.

The Supplement (1968) edit

After the publication of the ninth edition in 1940, and shortly after the deaths of both Stuart Jones and McKenzie, the OUP maintained a list of addenda et corrigenda ("additions and corrections"), which was bound with subsequent printings. However, in 1968, these were replaced by a Supplement to the LSJ. Neither the addenda nor the Supplement has ever been merged into the main text, which still stands as originally composed by Liddell, Scott, Jones, and McKenzie. The Supplement was initially edited by M. L. West. Since 1981, it has been edited by P. G. W. Glare, editor of the Oxford Latin Dictionary (not to be confused with Lewis and Short's A Latin Dictionary). Since 1988, it has been edited by Glare and Anne A. Thompson. As the title page of the Lexicon makes clear (and the prefaces to the main text and to the Supplement attest), this editorial work has been performed "with the cooperation of many scholars".

The Supplement primarily takes the form of a list of additions and corrections to the main text, sorted by entry. The supplemental entries are marked with signs to show the nature of the changes they call for. Thus, a user of the Lexicon can consult the Supplement after consulting the main text to see whether scholarship after Jones and McKenzie has provided any new information about a particular word. As of 2005, the most recent revision of the Supplement, published in 1996, contains 320 pages of corrections to the main text, as well as other materials.

Here is a typical entry from the revised Supplement:

x ἐκβουτῠπόομαι to be changed into a cow, S.fr. 269a.37 R.

The small "x" indicates that this word did not appear in the main text at all; "S.fr." refers to the collected fragmentary works of Sophocles.

One interesting new source of lexicographic material in the revised Supplement is the Mycenean inscriptions. The 1996 revised Supplement's Preface notes:

At the time of the publication of the first Supplement it was felt that the Ventris decipherment of the Linear B tablets was still too uncertain to warrant the inclusion of these texts in a standard dictionary. Ventris's interpretation is now generally accepted and the tablets can no longer be ignored in a comprehensive Greek dictionary [...].

Electronic editions edit

The ninth edition of LSJ has been freely available in electronic form since 2007, having been digitized by the Perseus Project. Diogenes, a free software package, incorporates the Perseus data and allows easy offline consultation of LSJ on Mac OS X, Windows, and Linux platforms.[5] Marcion is another open source application[6] that includes the Perseus LSJ.[7]

For mobile devices, both the Kindle E-Ink and the iPhone/iPod Touch feature data ported from Perseus. The Android market also currently offers the intermediate LSJ as an offline downloadable app for free[8] or for a small price.[9][10][11] A CD-ROM version published and sold by Logos Bible Software also incorporates the Supplement's additions to the ninth edition of LSJ. A new online version of LSJ was released in 2011 by the Thesaurus Linguae Graecae (TLG). The TLG version corrects "a large number of typographical errors", and includes links to the extensive TLG textual corpus.[12] A Kindle version, the "Complete Liddell & Scott's Lexicon with Inflections", is also available: it allows searches of most Classical Greek word-forms and supports a growing number of Ancient/Classical Greek texts for the device.[13]

Translations edit

The Lexicon has been translated into Modern Greek by Anestis Konstantinidis and was published in 1904 with the title H. Liddell – R. Scott – Α. Κωνσταντινίδου (Μέγα Λεξικόν τῆς Ἑλληνικῆς Γλώσσης).[14] An Italian translation of the Intermediate Liddell-Scott, entitled Dizionario illustrato Greco-Italiano was published in 1975 by Le Monnier, edited by Q. Cataudella, M. Manfredi and F. Di Benedetto.

Cambridge Greek Lexicon (2021) edit

LSJ was the basis of the project of John Chadwick and James Diggle at Cambridge to publish the Cambridge Greek Lexicon of 2021. Although it was initially conceived as a mere update of LSJ, the editors eventually decided to start afresh since they considered LSJ "too antiquated in concept, design and content". The CGL has a smaller scope than the LSJ (and also the Brill Dictionary of Ancient Greek), and is unlikely to replace it; however, it is still more comprehensive than the Middle Liddell, which it intends to replace.[15] The Cambridge Greek Lexicon uses contemporary language for its definitions and, unlike the LSJ, no longer elides the meaning of words considered offensive in Victorian times.[3]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ For comparisons between the two works, see A Latin Dictionary#Comparison with other dictionaries.

References edit

  1. ^ See the verse quoted below. Furthermore, see Naiditch p. 57, where he quotes "a variant of the Balliol Rhymes (p. 29): 'I am the Dean, and this is Mrs Liddell: / She plays the first, and I the second fiddle.'" Naiditch, P. G. (1993). "On Pronouncing the Names of Certain British Classical Scholars". The Classical Journal. 89 (1): 55–59. JSTOR 3297619.
  2. ^ Blackwell, Christopher W. (2018) Liddell-Scott Lexicon in the CITE Architecture, Oct 30, 2018
  3. ^ a b Flood, Allison (27 May 2021). "First English dictionary of ancient Greek since Victorian era 'spares no blushes'". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 27 May 2021. Retrieved 27 May 2021.
  4. ^ ISBN 1-84356-026-7
  5. ^ "Diogenes". Retrieved 2 June 2020.
  6. ^ Vagrantos (10 June 2013). "Marcion". SourceForge. Retrieved 21 June 2013. GNU General Public License version 2.0 (GPLv2)
  7. ^ Konvicka, Milan. "Greek dictionary". Marcion - software to study the Gnostic scriptures. Retrieved 21 June 2013.
  8. ^ "Ancient Greek Lexicon & Syntax".
  9. ^ "Lighthouse Digital Publishing". Lighthouse Digital Publishing. Retrieved 15 April 2014.
  10. ^ Lexiphanes February 14, 2010, at the Wayback Machine, David Finucane, iPhone Apps 2012-03-04 at the Wayback Machine
  11. ^ "LSJ Greek Dictionary - Android Apps on Google Play". Market.android.com. Retrieved 15 April 2014.
  12. ^ "TLG: About the Liddell-Scott-Jones Lexicon". Tlg.uci.edu. Retrieved 15 April 2014.
  13. ^ Complete Liddell & Scott's Lexicon with Inflections [Kindle Edition] (Ninth ed.). Lighthouse Digital Publications. 18 March 2012. ASIN B0092K07BQ. Retrieved 15 April 2014.
  14. ^ National Library of Greece catalogue
  15. ^ Huitink, Luuk; Nijk, Arjan. . Bryn Mawr Classical Review. Archived from the original on 26 March 2022.

External links edit

Electronic editions edit

  • at the Thesaurus Linguae Graecae (archived 27 May 2016)
  • LSJ at Perseus: Word study tool; Search headwords and English definitions; Browse text Because it is not easy to computer-typeset breves and macrons in Greek, the Perseus transcription is "α^" for a short alpha, and "α_" for a long alpha.
  • LSJ at Harvard's Archimedes Project 5 March 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  • LSJ at Univ. of Chicago 28 July 2020 at the Wayback Machine
  • LSJ in wiki format and diacritics insensitive search in Greek and Latin characters
  • Modern Greek version of LSJ by the University of the Aegean
  • LSJ via the Philologus online interface

Scanned copies of the Great Scott edit

  • Fourth edition (1855) (archive.org)
  • Sixth edition (1869) (archive.org)
  • Seventh edition (1883) (archive.org)
  • Eighth edition (1901) (archive.org)
  • Ninth edition (1940) vol. 1 (archive.org)
  • Ninth edition (1940) vol. 2 (archive.org)
  • American edition (1853), ed. Henry Drisler (archive.org)

Scanned copies of the Middle Liddell edit

  • First edition (1889) (archive.org)

greek, english, lexicon, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, often, referred, liddell, scott, liddell, scott, jones, standard, lexicographical, work, ancient, greek, language, originally, edited, henry, george, liddell, robert, scott, henry, stuart, . LSJ redirects here For other uses see LSJ disambiguation A Greek English Lexicon often referred to as Liddell amp Scott ˈ l ɪ d el 1 or Liddell Scott Jones LSJ is a standard lexicographical work of the Ancient Greek language originally edited by Henry George Liddell Robert Scott Henry Stuart Jones and Roderick McKenzie and published in 1843 by the Oxford University Press A Greek English LexiconAuthorHenry George LiddellRobert ScottHenry Stuart JonesRoderick McKenzieCountryUnited KingdomLanguageEnglishPublished1843 Oxford University Press Media typePrint hardcover PagesApprox 1 705ISBN978 0 19 864226 8Dewey Decimal483 21 20LC ClassPA445 E5 L6 1996It was most recently revised for its ninth edition of 1940 Abridged versions and a supplement exist It was initially the basis for the 2021 Cambridge Greek Lexicon although subsequently that became a complete rewrite from scratch Contents 1 Liddell and Scott s lexicon 1843 1940 1 1 Condensed editions 1843 1889 1 2 The Supplement 1968 1 3 Electronic editions 1 4 Translations 2 Cambridge Greek Lexicon 2021 3 See also 4 Notes 5 References 6 External links 6 1 Electronic editions 6 2 Scanned copies of the Great Scott 6 3 Scanned copies of the Middle LiddellLiddell and Scott s lexicon 1843 1940 editThe lexicon was begun in the 19th century and is now in its ninth revised edition published in 1940 It was based on the earlier Handworterbuch der griechischen Sprache by the German lexicographer Franz Passow first published in 1819 fourth edition 1831 which in turn was based on Johann Gottlob Schneider s Kritisches griechisch deutsches Handworterbuch The Lexicon has served as the basis for all later lexicographical work on the ancient Greek language such as the ongoing Greek Spanish dictionary project Diccionario Griego Espanol DGE It is now conventionally referred to as Liddell amp Scott Liddell Scott Jones or LSJ and its three sizes are sometimes referred to as The Little Liddell The Middle Liddell and The Big Liddell or The Great Scott The LSJ main edition has 116 502 entries 2 According to Stuart Jones s preface to the ninth 1925 edition the creation of the Lexicon was originally proposed by David Alphonso Talboys an Oxford publisher It was published by the Clarendon Press at Oxford rather than by Talboys who died before the first edition 1843 was complete The second through seventh editions appeared in 1845 1849 1855 1861 1869 and 1883 The first editor of the LSJ Henry George Liddell was Dean of Christ Church Oxford and the father of Alice Liddell the eponymous Alice of the writings of Lewis Carroll The eighth edition 1897 was the last edition published during Liddell s lifetime The LSJ is sometimes compared and contrasted with A Latin Dictionary by Lewis and Short which was also published by Oxford University Press OUP a It is also sometimes compared by whom with the Bauer lexicon which is a similar work focused on the Greek of the New Testament The LSJ s definitions reflect the Victorian morality of its time For example xezw chezo to shit is translated as ease oneself do one s need binew bineo to fuck as inire coire of illicit intercourse and laikazw laikazo to suck cocks as to wench 3 Condensed editions 1843 1889 edit Two condensed editions of LSJ were published by Oxford University Press and remain in print In 1843 the same year as the full lexicon s publication A Lexicon Abridged from Liddell and Scott s Greek English Lexicon sometimes called the Little Liddell was published Several revised editions followed For example a reprint re typeset in 2007 of the 1909 edition is available from Simon Wallenberg Press 4 In 1889 an intermediate edition of the lexicon An Intermediate Greek English Lexicon was prepared on the basis of the seventh edition 1883 of LSJ In comparison to the smaller abridgement this Middle Liddell contains more entries covering the essential vocabulary of most commonly read Ancient Greek literature adds citations of the authors to illustrate the history of Greek usage without identifying the passages and provides more help with irregular forms The Supplement 1968 edit After the publication of the ninth edition in 1940 and shortly after the deaths of both Stuart Jones and McKenzie the OUP maintained a list of addenda et corrigenda additions and corrections which was bound with subsequent printings However in 1968 these were replaced by a Supplement to the LSJ Neither the addenda nor the Supplement has ever been merged into the main text which still stands as originally composed by Liddell Scott Jones and McKenzie The Supplement was initially edited by M L West Since 1981 it has been edited by P G W Glare editor of the Oxford Latin Dictionary not to be confused with Lewis and Short s A Latin Dictionary Since 1988 it has been edited by Glare and Anne A Thompson As the title page of the Lexicon makes clear and the prefaces to the main text and to the Supplement attest this editorial work has been performed with the cooperation of many scholars The Supplement primarily takes the form of a list of additions and corrections to the main text sorted by entry The supplemental entries are marked with signs to show the nature of the changes they call for Thus a user of the Lexicon can consult the Supplement after consulting the main text to see whether scholarship after Jones and McKenzie has provided any new information about a particular word As of 2005 update the most recent revision of the Supplement published in 1996 contains 320 pages of corrections to the main text as well as other materials Here is a typical entry from the revised Supplement x ἐkboytῠpoomai to be changed into a cow S fr 269a 37 R The small x indicates that this word did not appear in the main text at all S fr refers to the collected fragmentary works of Sophocles One interesting new source of lexicographic material in the revised Supplement is the Mycenean inscriptions The 1996 revised Supplement s Preface notes At the time of the publication of the first Supplement it was felt that the Ventris decipherment of the Linear B tablets was still too uncertain to warrant the inclusion of these texts in a standard dictionary Ventris s interpretation is now generally accepted and the tablets can no longer be ignored in a comprehensive Greek dictionary Electronic editions edit The ninth edition of LSJ has been freely available in electronic form since 2007 having been digitized by the Perseus Project Diogenes a free software package incorporates the Perseus data and allows easy offline consultation of LSJ on Mac OS X Windows and Linux platforms 5 Marcion is another open source application 6 that includes the Perseus LSJ 7 For mobile devices both the Kindle E Ink and the iPhone iPod Touch feature data ported from Perseus The Android market also currently offers the intermediate LSJ as an offline downloadable app for free 8 or for a small price 9 10 11 A CD ROM version published and sold by Logos Bible Software also incorporates the Supplement s additions to the ninth edition of LSJ A new online version of LSJ was released in 2011 by the Thesaurus Linguae Graecae TLG The TLG version corrects a large number of typographical errors and includes links to the extensive TLG textual corpus 12 A Kindle version the Complete Liddell amp Scott s Lexicon with Inflections is also available it allows searches of most Classical Greek word forms and supports a growing number of Ancient Classical Greek texts for the device 13 Translations edit The Lexicon has been translated into Modern Greek by Anestis Konstantinidis and was published in 1904 with the title H Liddell R Scott A Kwnstantinidoy Mega Le3ikon tῆs Ἑllhnikῆs Glwsshs 14 An Italian translation of the Intermediate Liddell Scott entitled Dizionario illustrato Greco Italiano was published in 1975 by Le Monnier edited by Q Cataudella M Manfredi and F Di Benedetto Cambridge Greek Lexicon 2021 editLSJ was the basis of the project of John Chadwick and James Diggle at Cambridge to publish the Cambridge Greek Lexicon of 2021 Although it was initially conceived as a mere update of LSJ the editors eventually decided to start afresh since they considered LSJ too antiquated in concept design and content The CGL has a smaller scope than the LSJ and also the Brill Dictionary of Ancient Greek and is unlikely to replace it however it is still more comprehensive than the Middle Liddell which it intends to replace 15 The Cambridge Greek Lexicon uses contemporary language for its definitions and unlike the LSJ no longer elides the meaning of words considered offensive in Victorian times 3 See also editDiccionario Griego Espanol Comparison of Ancient Greek dictionariesNotes edit For comparisons between the two works see A Latin Dictionary Comparison with other dictionaries References edit See the verse quoted below Furthermore see Naiditch p 57 where he quotes a variant of the Balliol Rhymes p 29 I am the Dean and this is Mrs Liddell She plays the first and I the second fiddle Naiditch P G 1993 On Pronouncing the Names of Certain British Classical Scholars The Classical Journal 89 1 55 59 JSTOR 3297619 Blackwell Christopher W 2018 Liddell Scott Lexicon in the CITE Architecture Oct 30 2018 a b Flood Allison 27 May 2021 First English dictionary of ancient Greek since Victorian era spares no blushes The Guardian Archived from the original on 27 May 2021 Retrieved 27 May 2021 ISBN 1 84356 026 7 Diogenes Retrieved 2 June 2020 Vagrantos 10 June 2013 Marcion SourceForge Retrieved 21 June 2013 GNU General Public License version 2 0 GPLv2 Konvicka Milan Greek dictionary Marcion software to study the Gnostic scriptures Retrieved 21 June 2013 Ancient Greek Lexicon amp Syntax Lighthouse Digital Publishing Lighthouse Digital Publishing Retrieved 15 April 2014 Lexiphanes Archived February 14 2010 at the Wayback Machine David Finucane iPhone Apps Archived 2012 03 04 at the Wayback Machine LSJ Greek Dictionary Android Apps on Google Play Market android com Retrieved 15 April 2014 TLG About the Liddell Scott Jones Lexicon Tlg uci edu Retrieved 15 April 2014 Complete Liddell amp Scott s Lexicon with Inflections Kindle Edition Ninth ed Lighthouse Digital Publications 18 March 2012 ASIN B0092K07BQ Retrieved 15 April 2014 National Library of Greece catalogue Huitink Luuk Nijk Arjan The Cambridge Greek lexicon Bryn Mawr Classical Review Archived from the original on 26 March 2022 External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article A Greek English Lexicon Website of the most recent print edition at the Oxford University Press archived 2 December 2008 Electronic editions edit The Online Liddell Scott Jones Greek English Lexicon at the Thesaurus Linguae Graecae archived 27 May 2016 LSJ at Perseus Word study tool Search headwords and English definitions Browse text Because it is not easy to computer typeset breves and macrons in Greek the Perseus transcription is a for a short alpha and a for a long alpha LSJ at Harvard s Archimedes Project Archived 5 March 2011 at the Wayback Machine LSJ at Univ of Chicago Archived 28 July 2020 at the Wayback Machine LSJ in wiki format and diacritics insensitive search in Greek and Latin characters Modern Greek version of LSJ by the University of the Aegean LSJ via the Philologus online interfaceScanned copies of the Great Scott edit Fourth edition 1855 archive org Sixth edition 1869 archive org Seventh edition 1883 archive org Eighth edition 1901 archive org Ninth edition 1940 vol 1 archive org Ninth edition 1940 vol 2 archive org American edition 1853 ed Henry Drisler archive org Scanned copies of the Middle Liddell edit First edition 1889 archive org Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title A Greek English Lexicon amp oldid 1183525009, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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