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Dictionary Building Resources

From MorDictionary

Dictionary Craft Tools

A 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

Corpus & Usage Research

 Track historical frequency of words.
 Modern American English usage patterns.
 British English usage data.
 Advanced corpus querying (professional tool).

Etymology Research

 Quick-reference etymology.
 Collaborative etymology chains and multilingual entries.
 Classical Greek and Latin texts.
  • Oxford English Dictionary (OED) β€” oed.com
 Historical English dictionary (subscription required).
 Early American English reference.

Pronunciation Tools

  • IPA Chart (International Phonetic Alphabet) β€” ipa chart
 Crowdsourced pronunciation recordings.
 Community-recorded pronunciation files.

Frequency & Register Checking

 Academic register reference.
 Literary corpora for historical usage.

Example Sentence Craft

Sentence Mining Communities


🧠 Neologism Design

Coining new words requires discipline, not whimsy.

Neologism Communities

  • Reddit neologismhelp
  • Lemmy neologismhelp
  • Linguistics forums

Principles of Sound Coinage

  • Morphological consistency
  • Transparent affix use
  • Etymological plausibility
  • Phonetic elegance
  • Semantic necessity

A good neologism fills a gap. A great neologism feels inevitable.


MorDictionary respects tradition while refusing to be boring.

General Dictionaries

  • Oxford English Dictionary
  • Merriam-Webster
  • Wiktionary
  • Wordnik

Specialized & Historical

  • Green’s Dictionary of Slang
  • Webster’s 1828
  • Regional glossaries
  • Field-specific glossaries (legal, nautical, theological, technical)

Each dictionary has a temperament. Study their strengths. Observe their weaknesses. Avoid their dullness.


πŸ› Collaborative Lexicography

Dictionary-making is no longer confined to ivory towers.

It is communal.

  • Wiktionary (open lexicography)
  • Community glossaries
  • Language preservation projects
  • Personal lexicographic blogs

MorDictionary encourages participation, experimentation, and preservation.


πŸ“œ Philosophy

We 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


MorDictionary β€” A project of the Moribund Institute.