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Ordfrekvens och ordboksutrymme

Wendt, Bo LU (2012) Elfte konferensen om lexikografi i Norden p.621-628
Abstract
In a linguistic description there is normally a more or less conspicious lack of balance between the space a phenomenon requires to be fully described and its frequence in actual language usage, here called a lack of iconicity. The article investigates to what degree some Danish and Swedish dictionaries are iconical in this sense, i.e. whether the space of a word in the dictionary corresponds with its actual frequence. As expected, iconicity is rather meager, the most frequent words being treated much shorter than there actual frequence would suggest and the less frequent ones the other way around, though the more comprehensive the dictionary the more iconical it normally is regarding the first category. Further, frequent nouns and... (More)
In a linguistic description there is normally a more or less conspicious lack of balance between the space a phenomenon requires to be fully described and its frequence in actual language usage, here called a lack of iconicity. The article investigates to what degree some Danish and Swedish dictionaries are iconical in this sense, i.e. whether the space of a word in the dictionary corresponds with its actual frequence. As expected, iconicity is rather meager, the most frequent words being treated much shorter than there actual frequence would suggest and the less frequent ones the other way around, though the more comprehensive the dictionary the more iconical it normally is regarding the first category. Further, frequent nouns and adjectives can be shown to exhibit a more iconical description than frequent verbs, and compounds and derivations treated together with their base words often exhibit a (shorter and thus) more iconical description than those treated as their own entries (often iconically much too extensive). Iconicity is of course not the overall ideal state of good dictionary entries: frequent form words are often best treated rather generalized (and thus rather shortly), some less frequent words can only be described accurately if described rather extensively. Yet, it is argued that iconicity should not be dismissed alltogether but to be considered as one factor (among many other ones) when deciding upon how much space a word is worth in a dictionary. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
keywords
dictionaries, space of description, word frequency, iconical
host publication
Nordiska studier i lexikografi 11
editor
Eaker, Birgit ; Larsson, Lennart and Mattisson, Anki
pages
8 pages
publisher
Nordiska föreningen för lexikografi
conference name
Elfte konferensen om lexikografi i Norden
conference location
Sweden
conference dates
2011-05-24 - 2011-05-27
ISSN
0803-9313
ISBN
978-91-85333-42-4
language
Swedish
LU publication?
yes
additional info
The information about affiliations in this record was updated in December 2015. The record was previously connected to the following departments: Swedish (015011001)
id
f36ff317-d867-4f5f-9a84-507c904d7590 (old id 3173850)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 14:50:49
date last changed
2018-11-21 20:30:44
@inproceedings{f36ff317-d867-4f5f-9a84-507c904d7590,
  abstract     = {{In a linguistic description there is normally a more or less conspicious lack of balance between the space a phenomenon requires to be fully described and its frequence in actual language usage, here called a lack of iconicity. The article investigates to what degree some Danish and Swedish dictionaries are iconical in this sense, i.e. whether the space of a word in the dictionary corresponds with its actual frequence. As expected, iconicity is rather meager, the most frequent words being treated much shorter than there actual frequence would suggest and the less frequent ones the other way around, though the more comprehensive the dictionary the more iconical it normally is regarding the first category. Further, frequent nouns and adjectives can be shown to exhibit a more iconical description than frequent verbs, and compounds and derivations treated together with their base words often exhibit a (shorter and thus) more iconical description than those treated as their own entries (often iconically much too extensive). Iconicity is of course not the overall ideal state of good dictionary entries: frequent form words are often best treated rather generalized (and thus rather shortly), some less frequent words can only be described accurately if described rather extensively. Yet, it is argued that iconicity should not be dismissed alltogether but to be considered as one factor (among many other ones) when deciding upon how much space a word is worth in a dictionary.}},
  author       = {{Wendt, Bo}},
  booktitle    = {{Nordiska studier i lexikografi 11}},
  editor       = {{Eaker, Birgit and Larsson, Lennart and Mattisson, Anki}},
  isbn         = {{978-91-85333-42-4}},
  issn         = {{0803-9313}},
  keywords     = {{dictionaries; space of description; word frequency; iconical}},
  language     = {{swe}},
  pages        = {{621--628}},
  publisher    = {{Nordiska föreningen för lexikografi}},
  title        = {{Ordfrekvens och ordboksutrymme}},
  year         = {{2012}},
}