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Dictionary of the Older Scottish Tongue

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to ensure that due consideration was given to Scots as a separate language. Consequently, she placed greater emphasis on the functioning of the word in society. This period of editorship also saw a reduction in discrimination between the language of the 16th and 17th centuries. Entries were no longer omitted merely because they made their first appearance in Scots after 1600. Though the spelling may be anglicised, much of the usage of the 17th century is still characteristically Scots. Dareau also oversaw the final rejection of the concept of separating entries by phonemic variation, which had meant that readers needed to consult several entries to gain a full picture of the history of what was effectively the same word. Since 2004 the ability to search the DOST electronically within the
167:, who endorsed Craigie's principles, but he was nonetheless aware that the coverage of the language provided in Volumes I and II still had some room for improvement. He more than doubled the number of source texts read for the dictionary and launched a new reading programme, with more than 50 new voluntary excerptors, reading both printed editions and, mostly on microfilm, manuscripts. Aitken also widened the scope of the editing. Under his regime sense analysis was refined and the illustration of usage came more and more to be considered an important part of an entry. As regards coverage, Aitken aimed at exhaustiveness for the pre-1600 linguistic record. At the same time however, he continued Craigie's policy of filtering out material belonging to the 17th century. 24: 176:
dictionary. Stevenson tackled a number of previously intransigent problems of the management of the dictionary materials, especially with regard to making previously used slips available for the later letters of the alphabet, a process known as sending on. Stevenson regularised this procedure and modernised and simplified some of the rules of layout of the published material.
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Inevitably, the perceptions of different editors have reflected the changing views of Scotland's past and present, and attitudes to the Scots language developed considerably between the 1920s and 2002. The project also evolved into an enterprise supported and funded by six of Scotland's Universities
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Under the editorial direction of Margaret G. Dareau, Craigie and Aitken's approaches were developed further, and the project finally reached completion. Dareau believed that while Scots words must of necessity be compared with their English counterparts (where available), great care should be taken
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Dr James A. C. Stevenson further refined the coverage of semantic and grammatical usage. He continued the trend towards further and more detailed analysis of the entries and sought especially to capture the intricacies of Older Scots syntax. He echoed Aitken with respect to the scope of the
41: 205:, led by Dr Victor Skretkowicz and lexicographer, Susan Rennie, digitized the full text of all twelve volumes and made them freely available as part of the online 88: 138:
from the earliest written evidence in the 12th century until the year 1700. DOST was compiled over a period of some eighty years, from 1931 to 2002.
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and a good number of Charitable Foundations, and, latterly, by the Scottish Office and the Scottish Arts Council.
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The fundamental principles of editorial policy were established under the authority of the first editor,
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has greatly helped to alleviate this difficulty when dealing with the earlier sections of the alphabet.
256: 202: 228: 147: 233: 322: 164: 278: 211:. The archives of their work are now held by the University's Archive Services. 135: 23: 127: 17: 48:. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. 8: 108:Learn how and when to remove this message 57:"Dictionary of the Older Scottish Tongue" 220: 156:(1901–1928) and co-editor of the first 150:, who was also the third editor of the 123:Dictionary of the Older Scottish Tongue 257:"MSP supports Scots language project" 7: 46:adding citations to reliable sources 163:Craigie was followed by Professor 14: 201:From 2001 to 2004, a team at the 304:Dictionary of the Scots Language 279:"Online move for Scots language" 208:Dictionary of the Scots Language 187:Dictionary of the Scots Language 22: 334:1931 establishments in Scotland 33:needs additional citations for 314:Scottish Language Dictionaries 1: 132:history of the Scots language 309:Scottish National Dictionary 370: 339:Scottish non-fiction books 229:"Scots wha hae web access" 153:Oxford English Dictionary 329:1931 non-fiction books 126:(DOST) is a 12-volume 349:University of Dundee 203:University of Dundee 42:improve this article 160:Supplement (1933). 148:Sir William Craigie 130:that documents the 142:Craigie and Aitken 118: 117: 110: 92: 361: 291: 290: 288: 286: 275: 269: 268: 266: 264: 253: 247: 246: 244: 242: 234:Contact Magazine 225: 113: 106: 102: 99: 93: 91: 50: 26: 18: 369: 368: 364: 363: 362: 360: 359: 358: 319: 318: 300: 295: 294: 284: 282: 277: 276: 272: 262: 260: 255: 254: 250: 240: 238: 227: 226: 222: 217: 195: 182: 173: 144: 114: 103: 97: 94: 51: 49: 39: 27: 12: 11: 5: 367: 365: 357: 356: 351: 346: 344:Scots language 341: 336: 331: 321: 320: 317: 316: 311: 306: 299: 296: 293: 292: 270: 248: 219: 218: 216: 213: 194: 191: 181: 178: 172: 169: 143: 140: 116: 115: 30: 28: 21: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 366: 355: 352: 350: 347: 345: 342: 340: 337: 335: 332: 330: 327: 326: 324: 315: 312: 310: 307: 305: 302: 301: 297: 280: 274: 271: 258: 252: 249: 236: 235: 230: 224: 221: 214: 212: 210: 209: 204: 199: 192: 190: 188: 179: 177: 170: 168: 166: 161: 159: 155: 154: 149: 141: 139: 137: 133: 129: 125: 124: 112: 109: 101: 90: 87: 83: 80: 76: 73: 69: 66: 62: 59: –  58: 54: 53:Find sources: 47: 43: 37: 36: 31:This article 29: 25: 20: 19: 16: 354:Dictionaries 283:. Retrieved 281:. March 2004 273: 261:. Retrieved 251: 239:. Retrieved 232: 223: 206: 200: 196: 193:Significance 183: 174: 165:A. J. Aitken 162: 157: 151: 145: 122: 121: 119: 104: 95: 85: 78: 71: 64: 52: 40:Please help 35:verification 32: 15: 259:. June 2002 136:Older Scots 323:Categories 237:. May 2002 215:References 128:dictionary 68:newspapers 263:6 January 171:Stevenson 134:covering 298:See also 241:14 April 98:May 2024 82:scholar 285:8 July 180:Dareau 84:  77:  70:  63:  55:  89:JSTOR 75:books 287:2020 265:2020 243:2019 120:The 61:news 158:OED 44:by 325:: 231:. 289:. 267:. 245:. 111:) 105:( 100:) 96:( 86:· 79:· 72:· 65:· 38:.

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verification
improve this article
adding citations to reliable sources
"Dictionary of the Older Scottish Tongue"
news
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books
scholar
JSTOR
Learn how and when to remove this message
dictionary
history of the Scots language
Older Scots
Sir William Craigie
Oxford English Dictionary
A. J. Aitken
Dictionary of the Scots Language
University of Dundee
Dictionary of the Scots Language
"Scots wha hae web access"
Contact Magazine
"MSP supports Scots language project"
"Online move for Scots language"
Dictionary of the Scots Language
Scottish National Dictionary
Scottish Language Dictionaries
Categories
1931 non-fiction books
1931 establishments in Scotland

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