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Concise Oxford English Dictionary: 11th edition, revised 2009 on CD-ROM Windows/Mac Individual User Version 2.0
 
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Concise Oxford English Dictionary: 11th edition, revised 2009 on CD-ROM Windows/Mac Individual User Version 2.0 [CD-ROM]

Oxford Dictionaries
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (25 customer reviews)

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There is a newer edition of this item:
Concise Oxford English Dictionary: CD-ROM edition, Windows/Mac Individual User Version 1.0: over 50.000 spoken pronounciations Concise Oxford English Dictionary: CD-ROM edition, Windows/Mac Individual User Version 1.0: over 50.000 spoken pronounciations 4.6 out of 5 stars (5)
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Product details

  • CD-ROM: 16 pages
  • Publisher: OUP Oxford; 11th Revised edition edition (9 July 2009)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0199561060
  • ISBN-13: 978-0199561063
  • Product Dimensions: 19.2 x 13 x 1.4 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (25 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 529,323 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Product Description

Review

A dictionary may not contain narratives and poems, but the best ones, like this one, give you the tools. (David Malcolm, Times Literary Supplement )

This is the dictionary par excellence for the general reader. (David Malcolm, Times Literary Supplement )

It answers a lot of questions; it is easy to use; it does not take up too much space on a crowded desk. (David Malcolm, TLS ) --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Product Description

The Concise Oxford English Dictionary is a world-famous bestseller, chosen by thousands of users for its up-to-date and authoritative coverage of the English language. This edition provides all the content of the print edition in a convenient and easy-to-use CD-ROM. It contains over 240,000 words, phrases, and definitions, providing meanings for everyday words including scientific and technical vocabulary, as well as English from around the world. This revised edition of the dictionary has been updated with hundreds of new words and phrases based on research from the Oxford Reading Programme and the Oxford English Corpus. The CD-ROM version of the dictionary offers full-text search functionality, instant look-up from Windows® documents, including email and the internet, and high-quality spoken pronunciations for thousands of words, making it ideal for family use, as well as for home, work, and school use. The CD-ROM is also Mac compatible for the first time, due to brand new software. The Concise Oxford English Dictionary on CD-ROM is an ideal reference tool in a convenient format.

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
24 of 24 people found the following review helpful
By Peter Biddlecombe TOP 500 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Hardcover
Anyone old enough to remember the days when executives had secretaries should be able to confirm that the well-thumbed dictionary most likely to be found in the sec's office was the Concise Oxford. It was also the dictionary that a wise parent might give to their child going off to college or university. It earned this position by combining the authority that came ultimately from the OED with the common sense and practicality that chose the right subset of words to represent the English used or likely to be encountered, in real life by real people. To those who know about popular dictionaries in the USA, I can just say "this is our Websters Collegiate".

You can of course get one-volume dictionaries with many more words - the full versions of Chambers and Collins, and the Oxford Dictionary of English. Very good dictionaries all, but a notch heavier and more expensive. But for clear coverage of the vast majority of words you're ever likely to meet, the Concise does the job. It does more than the job in some cases, with usage and history notes for various words. The usage notes are the more useful (and more frequent), telling you about things like the times when round is used instead of around, and vice versa, or the offensiveness of 'spastic' in modern use. As another reviewer points out, pronunciations are only given where they're not obvious to English speakers. Not a problem, I think, unless you're a non-native speaker of English - but there are dictionaries designed specifically for use by students of English, which I suspect deal with this issue.

Placed right in the middle of the dictionary is a 24-page "Centre Section" with information about the way lexicographers deal with English words, lists of ineteresting words of various kinds, and a guide to good English. This placement seems a bit odd, but the shading on page edges makes it easy to find (for other pages, this does a pale grey letter-less imitation of thumb-indexing - helpful once you remember a few things like "the fat letter near the end is S"). My guess is that some work with real dictionary users discovered that having this stuff at the beginning or end was a good way to ensure that almost no-one found it.

A brief mention for the reason I own too many dictionaries - the Concise Oxford is one of the two dictionaries used as a standard reference by the Times crossword (the other is Collins). Lots of people will tell you that "Chambers is the only dictionary for crosswords". If you're doing the fiendish barred-grid puzzles like Azed and the Listener this is true, but except for the odd bit of wildness from Araucaria and the like, the vast majority of answers in a daily paper cryptic crossword (proper nouns excepted of course) will be found in the humble COED.
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103 of 106 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
Summary: Comprehensive, up-to-date, but short on definitions and illustrative examples

Reviewer: A reader from Singapore

The revised eleventh edition is very comprehensive and up-to-date in its coverage of words from different varieties of English. I am particularly impressed by the large number of "informal" words and phrases that have not yet appeared in other dictionaries, even those available online.

However, I am disappointed that, to accommodate the new additions, the definitions tend to be short, so much so that the full nuance is lost. Illustrative examples of word use are also greatly reduced. Like othe recent Oxford dictionaries, it does not provide the pronunciation of many words that the editors consider familiar to native speakers of English in the UK.

I have changed my mind about giving away the eighth and ninth editions of the COD, which give more detailed information on the words that they include.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
Concise Oxford English Dictionary

The COD has always been the best small English dictionary. Its rivals have drawbacks: Chambers has too many obscure Scottish words, and Collins lacks many useful words.

The latest edition of the COD updates the vocabulary well, without including too many temporarily topical words whose life is likely to be short.

My only criticism of the latest edition is the inclusion in the middle of a guidance section. This should have been at the beginning or the end. But this is a very small point - perhaps largely a matter of taste - about what is otherwise a very useful book.

David Lucas
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
English at its best.
I have already purchased this dictionary, and the most recent purchase was for a Christmas present, along with the Seiko crossword solver. Read more
Published 5 months ago by Derek Rainbow
oxford dictionery
i enter a lot of competitions, and find the oxford dictionery
the best dictionery i have ever used, would highly recommend it
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I am not sure why an earlier reviewer had problems with this product, but it installs and runs happily on my (Windows 7, 64-bit) machine with no appreciable delays. Read more
Published 16 months ago by William Hudson
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Not as good as previous editions. More word entries but now missing Appendix of, Countries of the World,Weights, measures and Notation, and Chemical Elements in alphabetical order.
Published 16 months ago by M. Aherne
Good Value
Good quality edition. Well worth spending a bit extra to get the Oxford edition of the thesaurus as much more information that any other editions. Great value for money.
Published 19 months ago by jood
Good news, bad news
Needing a supplement to my aging 1987 Webster, and in particular one reliably giving British usage, I originally bought the Cambridge International Dictionary of English. Read more
Published 20 months ago by Paul Magnussen
Concise Oxford English Dictionary: 11th Edition CD-ROM
I bought this because it is compatible with my new Apple Mac, as I had the older version which can only be used on Windows. Read more
Published on 16 May 2010 by Beverley Fawcett
new oxford english dictionary
I found the site very informative,only queery is their was no dimension's to the new book size that i could see. Read more
Published on 2 May 2010 by KELSO
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