Dictionary Building Resources
Dictionary Craft Tools
editA practical guide for lexicographers, wordsmiths, and neologism architects.
MorDictionary does not merely define words.
We build them. We preserve them. We refine them. We sometimes invent them.
This page collects tools, communities, and reference materials useful for crafting dictionary entries, mining example sentences, and coining neologisms.
Entry Construction Tools
editCorpus & Usage Research
edit- Google Books Ngram Viewer — Google Ngram Viewer — Track historical frequency of words.
- COCA (Corpus of Contemporary American English) — english-corpora.org/coca — Modern American English usage patterns.
- British National Corpus — english-corpora.org/bnc — British English usage data.
- Sketch Engine — sketchengine.eu — Advanced corpus querying tool.
Etymology Research
edit- Online Etymology Dictionary — etymonline.com — Quick-reference etymology.
- Wiktionary — wiktionary.org — Collaborative etymology chains.
- Perseus Digital Library — perseus.tufts.edu — Classical Greek and Latin texts.
- Oxford English Dictionary (OED) — oed.com — Historical English dictionary (subscription required).
- Webster’s 1828 Dictionary — webstersdictionary1828.com — Early American English reference.
Pronunciation Tools
edit- IPA Chart — ipa chart
- Forvo — forvo.com — Crowdsourced pronunciation recordings.
- Wiktionary Audio Archives — commons pronunciation files
Frequency & Register Checking
edit- Word Frequency Lists — wordfrequency.info
- Google Scholar — scholar.google.com — Academic register reference.
- Project Gutenberg — gutenberg.org — Literary corpora for historical usage.
Example Sentence Craft
editSentence Mining Communities
edit- r/SentenceMiners (Reddit)
- c/SentenceMiners (Lemmy)
Neologism Design
editNeologism Communities
edit- Reddit — r/NeologismsHelp
- Lemmy — c/NeologismHelp
- Linguistics forums and word-creation discussion groups
Recommended Dictionaries & Glossaries
editGeneral Dictionaries
edit- Oxford English Dictionary (OED) — oed.com
- Merriam-Webster — merriam-webster.com
- Wiktionary — wiktionary.org
- Wordnik — wordnik.com
Specialized & Historical
edit- Green’s Dictionary of Slang — greensdictofslang.com
- Webster’s 1828 Dictionary — webstersdictionary1828.com
- Phrontistery — phrontistery.info — Obscure and rare vocabulary collections
- The Grandiloquent Dictionary — PDF edition — Unusual and sesquipedalian words
- Oxford Reference — oxfordreference.com — Subject glossaries (legal, theological, technical, etc.)
Collaborative Lexicography Philosophy
editDictionary-making is no longer confined to ivory towers, but maybe we should try to minimize the slop a smidge. I mean, I love Urban Dictionary, but sometimes it’s a bit much.
Let’s have fun, but let’s try to make a functional dictionary at the same time.
Philosophy
editWe oppose boring dictionaries.
A dictionary entry should:
- Inform
- Contextualize
- Illuminate
- Delight
A lexicon is not merely a record. It is a living archive of thought.
See Also
editMorDictionary — A project of the Moribund Institute.