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Why were the first encyclopedias called dictionaries while today they are not?

Title page from the 1st edition.

Why were the first encyclopedias called dictionaries while today they are not?

and 2 --Oliver s. 13:46, 5 November 2006 (UTC)

See Encyclopedia#Characteristics, and the subsequent sections. -GTBacchus(talk) 21:55, 6 November 2006 (UTC)

Notability

Hi.

I saw This: "Biography articles should only be given for people with some sort of achievement." They do not necessarily need to have some sort of "achievement", then need to be "notable", which does not mean the same thing. See the page WP:N. 170.215.83.4 01:46, 30 November 2006 (UTC)

OK, so do I really not understand WINAD, then?

I found another entry that, to me, seems to belong in an etymological dictionary: Almighty dollar. It's an entry about a phrase, not a concept. I understand WINAD to be saying that entries should be about concepts (of course including specific people, places, or things), but not words except for relatively rare intstances where the itself is a concept. Just documenting every literary turn of phrase, every clever adjective + noun, combination, is to my understand contrary to WINAD. But if past experience is any indication, AfDing an article like this is useless because people will come out of the woodwork to testify that it's really useful to have the etymology of this phrase in one handy place. I don't doubt it, but I don't see how an article like this is encyclopedic.

See also my comments above about Freeway/Motorway, Mythical National Championship, etc. Plainly my understanding of WINAD isn't like anyone else's. Can someone explain to me what I'm missing? Can we consider modifying WINAD to say, "Wikipedia is not a dictionary unless the dictionary entries are somewhat long" since that seems to be the established consensus? Cheers, PhilipR 05:52, 17 December 2006 (UTC)

This page requires attention

A few month ago an editor (I vaguely recall that it was Mikkalai.) remarked that this page needed serious attention. Coming to re-read it, it is apparent that it does. It's highly confusing, and simply badly written. There's one sentence in the introduction whose subject is a pronoun with no antecedent, for example. I'm going to try improving it, to clarify the policy and its explanation. From the above discussion it appears that further clarification on the difference between an encyclopaedia and a dictionary is in order, for example. Uncle G 14:53, 4 January 2007 (UTC)

Input on article

Would someone please take a look at the article Jahbulon... By my understanding it should be a perfect example of what this guideline says should not be included in Wikipedia... and yet several AfDs have resulted in "keep" votes, so I am confused. I would like to get someone who is familiar with both the language and the intent of the guideline to explain why WINAD does not apply. Note that there already is a related Wiktionary article. Blueboar 22:00, 4 February 2007 (UTC)

Colour bugs me

Where does this article get off claiming that "color" and "colour" have "very different etymologies?" They are spelling variants, identical in meaning and usage; they are not separate words. One has a Latinized version of the suffix, the other a Norman Frenchified version. That is all. - Smerdis of Tlön 03:10, 21 March 2007 (UTC)

Major problem concerning this policy

This policy forbids articles on wikipedia which are dictionary definitions, even extended definitions including examples, usage, etymology. In other words, it forbids articles about words, and says that instead we should have articles about the topics which the words describe.

The problem with this is that we have many, many articles about words, thousands perhaps. See Category:Ethnic slurs, Category:Profanity, Category:Slang, some of the words in Category:Spanish language as well as in all other language categories, amongst other places. Note that we have at least 10 different articles which pretty much mean "poor (white) rural person", White trash, Hick, Hillbilly, Trailer trash, Yokel, Redneck, Peckerwood, Bogan, Cracker (pejorative), and probably many more. If we're supposed to have articles on topics, rather than on words, why would we have 10 articles on virtually the same topic?

Possible solutions:

I don't offhand even have a particular favorite solution, myself, but I believe we need some sort of policy we can reach consensus on and which matches what we actually do. --Xyzzyplugh 02:07, 22 March 2007 (UTC)

For anyone who might wander along and read this later, I've given up on this issue at the moment, as I think the community overall has no idea what it wants to do about articles on words, and we have no consensus to make any changes to this policy of the sort I was looking for originally. I've written an essay on this, Wikipedia:Articles about words. --Xyzzyplugh 14:30, 30 March 2007 (UTC)

Agreeing with most, I think this is a confusing issue. At what point does enough etymology and usage examples become a pedia article, if ever? Can someone take a look at Fall guy and Patsy? One's marked for AfD and one is not--this is not a suggestion that both be deleted, but rather, what differences might merit their being kept? I can see a Wikitionary's utility when it comes to using it for quick definitions. A different question is, how do I copy the article to Wiktionary? The full article does not show up? Luckystuff 08:12, 4 April 2007 (UTC)

Does WP:DICDEF cover this?

I'd appreciate it people would weigh in on whether the following article should exist: List of words removed from the English Dictionary. My feeling is that it should not, because there is not a definitive "English Dictionary". Thank you. Joie de Vivre 13:54, 24 May 2007 (UTC)

You're right—the page is too problematic. See my views on its talk page. — Lumbercutter 01:35, 25 May 2007 (UTC)

Glossaries!

Apparently lists of dictionary definitions become acceptable if the word 'glossary' is included in the title. And nobody told me. Shouldn't the policy say something about this? - (), 03:08, 27 May 2007 (UTC)

You're thinking in terms of "dictionary definition" as just being synonymous with "definition". A "dictionary definition" is more specific, it includes such things as pronunciation, how to spell different tenses, entymology, usage quotes, alternate spellings, etc., and the policy is clear about this being what's meant by "wikipedia is not a dictionary". The policy is that you aren't suppose to write an article with the title being a specific word or idiom and the article reflecting what would normally be found in a dictionary or usage guide, ie "its part of speech, its pluralizations, its usage, its etymology, its translations into other languages, and so forth." A glossary isn't normally a collection of "dictionary definitions", and the one you linked to isn't. A way to look at it maybe is that a glossary is more like a collection of related stubs all organized into one article. I agree there should be a clarifying subsection on this policy page about glossaries. They are grouped in their own category, there's an extensive number of them according to List of glossaries, and they are considered acceptable reference lists according to Wikipedia:Contents (same degree of acceptance as "Portals" and "Timelines"). But in looking into this topic, I've clicked through a decent number of glossary discussion pages, and have seen other AfDs that have been initiated by citing this policy (editors ultimately deciding in the AfDs that the policy doesn't apply and the articles are kept). Wazronk 23:20, 27 May 2007 (UTC)
This appears to have been extensively discussed in the archives without consensus. The debate is really about whether glossaries belong in Wikipedia, Wiktionary, or both, not whether we should get rid of them altogether. The policy is effectively mute on glossaries, which means that glossaries are inconsistently kept, deleted, or transwikied depending on who shows up to vote. I do wish we had clear policy on this.--Yannick 18:42, 22 July 2007 (UTC)

Infidel

proposal

What do you think about: Articles in the wikipedia describe a subject, but not the word that names the subject.

Refering to the fact that the dictionary deals with words, the encyclopedia with concepts, objects or things. 80.144.108.224 19:03, 18 August 2007 (UTC)


maybe just a big misunderstanding?

If you ask me, this guideline is a big misunderstanding. As you can see here, it once was introduced to encourage people to write a bit more about a subjekt than just that what u can find in one of those small dictionaries that consist of just one book. Thus it should rather have the title "Wp is a dictionary with enough room for a good definition". In fact an encyclopedia is nothing else but a dictionary; a pretty big and detailed one, yet not as detailed and exhausting to read as f.e. a monography. How else can u explain, that older encyclopedias were explicitely called dictionaries?

Title page from the 1st edition of the Britannica , were it calls itself dictionary
The title page of the Encyclopédie, which calls itself also dictionary

As you can see here an encyclopedia is a dictionary that just includes arts AND sciences (That means: it is just a dictionary that includes potentially every subject). --Oliver s. 15:39, 20 August 2007 (UTC)


You might be taken more seriously if you spell the word as "you"... and not "u". :>) Blueboar 16:52, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
  • Thank you. Done. sorry for my bad english. Im german. :-)--Oliver s. 23:08, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
  • Well, the fact that old encyclopedias called themselves dictionaries doesn't necessarily mean it makes sense to call them dictionaries now. Definitions do change over time. (By the way, English has no gender for inanimate objects; everything but a person is referred to with "it"). -Amarkov moo! 23:58, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
  • An encyclopedia describes Concepts, things etc., a dictionary describes words. For the encyclopedia "tree" refers to a definition of what a tree is - a plant in the woods. For the dictionary "tree" is a noun and it refers to a list of its meanings. 80.144.78.4 15:43, 28 August 2007 (UTC)

How about morphemes?

Are suffixes and other morphemes encyclopedic? -- Hoary 10:32, 21 August 2007 (UTC)

Nobody interested? (The question seems to have been raised before, too, at the end of this.) -- Hoary 05:51, 24 August 2007 (UTC)

Deletion discussion on an article about a word

NOTE: This is not a request for !votes on this issue; I am not canvassing for votes, merely posting a notice of a discussion that might affect this policy.

I nominated the article Fart for deletion, citing this policy. The AfD discussion is ongoing here: Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Fart. The consensus is building toward keeping the article, and if that is indeed the result, I believe it would have major ramifications for this policy page. Because policy is descriptive, not proscriptive, a consensus for keeping articles on notable words -- even in the absence of encyclopedic information beyond what would be found in a dictionary -- would require changes to this policy page. If you have an interest in the future development of this policy, I encourage you to weigh in on the deletion discussion, or at least read it to see where consensus is leading.

Thank you.

-- Powers T 14:47, 26 September 2007 (UTC)