The relationship between dictionaries and computers goes back around 50 years. But for most of that period, technology’s main contributions were to facilitate the capture and manipulation of dictionary text, and to provide lexicographers with greatly improved linguistic evidence. Working with computers and corpora had become routine by the mid-1990s, but there was no real sense of lexicography being automated. In this article we review developments in the period since 1997, showing how some of the key lexicographic tasks are beginning to be transferred, to a significant degree, from humans to machines. A recurrent theme is that automation not only saves effort but often leads to a more reliable and systematic description of a language. We close by speculating on how this process will develop in years to come.
Evans, Roger, Alexander Gelbukh, Gregory Grefenstette, Patrick Hanks, Miloš Jakubíček, Diana McCarthy, Martha Palmer, Ted Pedersen, Michael Rundell, Pavel Rychlý, Serge Sharoff & David Tugwell
2018. Adam Kilgarriff’s Legacy to Computational Linguistics and Beyond. In Computational Linguistics and Intelligent Text Processing [Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 9623], ► pp. 3 ff.
Boulton, Alex & Sylvie De Cock
2017. Dictionaries as aids for language learning. In International Handbook of Modern Lexis and Lexicography, ► pp. 1 ff.
Rundell, Michael
2017. Dictionaries and crowdsourcing, wikis and user-generated content. In International Handbook of Modern Lexis and Lexicography, ► pp. 1 ff.
Rundell, Michael
2018. Searching for extended units of meaning—and what to do when you find them. Lexicography 5:1 ► pp. 5 ff.
Gantar, Polona, Iztok Kosem & Simon Krek
2016. Discovering Automated Lexicography: The Case of the Slovene Lexical Database. International Journal of Lexicography 29:2 ► pp. 200 ff.
Geyken, Alexander
2015. Lexicogrammatical Patterns and Corpus Evidence in Schemann’s Dictionary of Idioms. International Journal of Lexicography 28:3 ► pp. 299 ff.
Manik, Svetlana
2015. On Difficulties of Compiling Parallel Corpus of Socio-Political Terms. Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences 198 ► pp. 465 ff.
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