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Concise Oxford-Duden German Dictionary: English-German, German-English
 
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Concise Oxford-Duden German Dictionary: English-German, German-English [Hardcover]

M. Clark , O. Thyen
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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There is a newer edition of this item:
Concise Oxford German Dictionary Concise Oxford German Dictionary 5.0 out of 5 stars (3)
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Product details

  • Hardcover: 1226 pages
  • Publisher: OUP Oxford; 2 edition (17 Sep 1998)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 019864230X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0198642305
  • Product Dimensions: 24 x 16.1 x 5.8 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 715,125 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

Product Description

Product Description

This new edition incorporates the recent German spelling reforms. Changes in spelling are signalled at entry level. With over over 140,00 words and phrases, over 240,000 translations, this dictionary provides unrivalled coverage of general, scientific, and technical and literary vocabulary, based on the British National Corpus, Oxford's unparalleled collection of written and spoken language. This major new edition includes thousands of new expressions such as alcopop, dataglove, emoticon, road rage, chatten, Datenautobahn, Suchmaschine, zappen. There is Extended treatment of specific vocabulary areas: detailed in-text boxes cover topics such as nationalities, jobs, addresses, greetings, asking for directions, and apologizing, giving extensive extra help with usage, constructions, and choosing vocabulary. Also new to this edition is a new guide to email and the Internet which offers a unique gateway to language and culture in the German-speaking world. There is also an entirely new Thematic wordfinder which brings together the essential vocabulary from a broad range of subject areas including the environment, society, business and industry, communication, media, and the arts. Specially designed as a reference section for writing, it covers the key topics required by regional exam boards.

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
allways on my desk 23 July 2009
Very glad to have acquired this dictionary, it is quite complete, gets a lot of use and has hardly let me donw.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com:  2 reviews
14 of 14 people found the following review helpful
BEST & MOST ACCURATE GERMAN TRANSLATIONS 29 May 2004
By Polar Bear - Published on Amazon.com
I LIVE AND STUDIED IN GERMANY BUT CAME FROM THE UNITED STATES. THIS IS THE ONLY DICTIONARY YOU WILL EVER NEED FOR GERMAN GRAMMAR CLASSES AND THE BIGGER EDITION (Oxford Duden) IS THE MOST COMPLETE DICTIONARY FOR HOME AND OFFICE USE. Forget all the rest. Dictionaries like Langenscheidt, Cassell, and Pons no longer reflect the most accurate and sophisticated way of speaking both German and English. Some still contain the unreformed German spelling. Some even have phrases my German professor cant understand and is amused at ! Some contain word translations that cant ``hit the nail on the head'', the student ends up talking in synonyms and translations are awful. Some synonyms that are provided by other dictionaries are as far from each other as the swing of a pendulum (once you reach professional level). The professors of linguistics here in Germany recommend this to English speakers, TO HELP THE STUDENT ACCURATELY TRANSLATE -the big bulky Oxford Duden dictionary (GroßWorterbuch) which is THE BEST EVER FOR HOME AND OFFICE USE, and this middle-sized one (The Concise Oxford Duden German Dictionary). You cant make a mistake with the partnership of these 2 publishing houses - Oxford and Duden (a partnership of one of the best English universities and a German publishing giant - those are the 2 countries that speak English and German! ). WHen I was studying Professional German, this concise one and the bigger Duden Oxford helped me a lot and my word translations were almost always accurate. My classmates kept borrowing my dictionary till the professor picked it up and asked everyone else to order it. I only had to improve on my grammar (conjugations, adjective declinations, genitive vs. accusative, etc.) DONT BUY ANY OTHER BRAND. Trust me. I studied and I am now teaching and I have thrown other dictionaries (no plurals, no du form, expressions are outdated and no longer in use in modern Germany, spellings have been changed under the reform law, etc.) and WORSE when you translate from other dictionaries, a professional German is amused because it sounds so funny. Save yourself the misery of awful translations that cant be understood in Germany. Langenscheidt is written (from the viewpoint/mind of a German native speaker, so each word is directly translated), BUT WHEN AN ENGLISH SPEAKER TRANSLATES, HE THINKS IN THE STRUCTURE OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE WHICH IS HIS MOTHER TONGUE. Hence, an English speaker will wrongly translate when using Langenscheidt because the word order and grammar of the English mind is not the same as a structured, detailed German mind. You should use a dictionary THAT THINKS THE WAY YOU DO (if you speak English- get an Oxford one). No other dictionary beats Oxford Duden if you are an English native speaker. THe second best for me is HarperCollins, if you cant find this.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
Quality dictionary 21 April 2006
By Kate in Dresden - Published on Amazon.com
I am currently living in Germany, and this is my go-to dictionary for every day questions. I chose this dictionary after examining several because of the complete entries (lots of semantic/idiomatic variety), the Oxford/Duden name and the use of IPA transcription. I haven't been disappointed.

One thing that I really like is that it qualifies entries thoroughly and bilingually, so you know exactly what is meant. For example, one of the entries for "doctor" reads "(coll.) (falsify) verf?lschen [Dokumente, Tonb?nder]; frisieren (ugs.) [Bilanzen, B?cher]" In this way, it provides a lot of information about the use and meaning of the word in both languages. Definitely a plus when you're dealing with nuance, but I can see how this might be a bit too much info for a beginner. (If you just ignore these extra bits, you'll be in the same boat as a simpler dictionary which doesn't offer this depth in the first place.)

This dictionary is also generally good at offering both American/British spellings/pronunciations/meanings and High German/dialectal (esp. Southern) variations. One thing that repeatedly annoys me, though, and this is getting really picky now, but I hate that the irregular verb charts are at the back of the book, rather than between the two halves.
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