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A dictionary is a reference work that lists the words of a language, usually in alphabetical order, and provides information about their meanings, pronunciations, and usage. Most entries include the headword, pronunciation (often shown with IPA), part of speech, one or more senses with definitions, notes on usage, and example sentences. Many dictionaries also present etymologies, inflected forms, pronunciation variants, synonyms and antonyms, cross-references, and abbreviations or symbols indicating frequency or register.

There are several types of dictionaries. Monolingual dictionaries explain words in the language they describe; bilingual

History and development: early lexicographic efforts included glossaries and lists in various languages. Milestones include the

Lexicography is the study and practice of compiling dictionaries. Dictionaries differ from thesauri, which organize words

or
multilingual
dictionaries
translate
between
languages;
learner’s
dictionaries
tailor
definitions
and
usage
notes
for
language
learners;
specialized
dictionaries
focus
on
domains
such
as
law,
medicine,
or
technology;
and
general
dictionaries
aim
for
broad
coverage.
Online
and
mobile
dictionaries
are
common
today,
frequently
updated
and
often
using
corpus
data
to
illustrate
current
usage.
Chinese
Shuowen
Jiezi,
Sanskrit
glossaries,
and
the
medieval
English
Table
Alphabeticall
(1604).
Samuel
Johnson’s
Dictionary
(1755)
helped
standardize
spelling
and
usage.
In
the
19th
and
20th
centuries,
lexicography
grew
with
descriptive
approaches
and
larger
reference
works;
the
digital
era
enabled
rapid
updates,
searchable
databases,
and
crowd-sourced
or
editorially
curated
content.
by
related
meanings
rather
than
by
single-word
definitions.
Limitations
include
language
change,
regional
biases,
and
the
need
for
continual
revision
to
reflect
current
use.