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  1. A Greek–English Lexicon, often referred to as Liddell & Scott (/ ˈlɪdəl /) [ 1 ] or Liddell–Scott–Jones (LSJ), is a standard lexicographical work of the Ancient Greek language originally edited by Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, Henry Stuart Jones, and Roderick McKenzie and published in 1843 by the Oxford University Press.

    • Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott
    • 1843
  2. The Lexicon now universally known as Liddell and Scott first appeared in 1843, the work of two young Oxford graduates. Henry George Liddell (1811–98) and Robert Scott (1811–87) had graduated with first-class honours in Classics in 1833; Liddell became a student (fellow) of Christ Church, where they had both been undergraduates, Scott a fellow of Balliol.

    • What Is LSJ
    • How Do We Improve LSJ and Other Greek dictionaries?
    • Bidirectional Language Pairs
    • Unidirectional Language Pairs
    • News

    The Liddell, Scott, Jones Ancient Greek Lexicon (LSJ) is perhaps the best known Ancient Greek-English dictionary. Here you can find a wiki implementation aiming to massively improve upon the dictionary resources in numerous ways like adding missing translations and expanding lexicographical shorthandinto clarity among others. Different types of tra...

    In the above comparison you can see the differences in the LSJ.gr entry for βραχυκατάληκτος before (Perseus version) and after editing. Note how the shorthand has been expanded (even standard Latin abbreviations are made transparent, i.e. f.l. and s.v. are linked) and how new translations have been added (i.e. βραχυκαταλήκτως = with the final sylla...

    Ancient Greek ⇄ English (LSJ ≈130,000 terms; Woodhouse digitized and edited is available for English to Ancient Greek—38,000+ terms—as well as a reversed version from Ancient Greek into English—≈17...
    Ancient Greek ⇄ Spanish (reversal based on DGE—63,000+ Ancient Greek to Spanish terms; 82,000+ Spanish to Ancient Greek terms, examples with multiple senses: pedo, intercalar)
    Ancient Greek ⇄ Dutch (reversal based on Mijnwoordenboek—≈17,000 Ancient Greek to Dutch terms; 22,000+Dutch to Ancient Greek terms)
    Ancient Greek ⇄ Russian (reversal based on Dvoretsky's dictionary—≈70,000terms per direction)
    Ancient Greek 🠒 French (Bailly abrégé—56,755terms; Bailly 2021 and French to Ancient Greek under preparation)
    Ancient Greek 🠒 German (Wilhelm Pape—105,019terms; German to Ancient Greek under preparation)
    Ancient Greek 🠒 Chinese(5,934 terms)
    Ancient Greek 🠒 Modern Greek
    12/10/2024:Mediawiki upgraded from 1.31 to 1.39.10.
    6/2024: Lexicon Magnum Latino-Sinicum imported as well as Chinese → Latin version, ie. 香料.
    2/2024: 15,000 pages with Multilingual Translationssection
    3/2023: 10,000 pages with Multilingual Translationssection
  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Eric_LiddellEric Liddell - Wikipedia

    Eric Henry Liddell (/ ˈlɪdəl /; 16 January 1902 – 21 February 1945) was a Scottish sprinter, rugby player and Christian missionary. Born in Qing China to Scottish missionary parents, he attended boarding school near London, spending time when possible with his family in Edinburgh, and afterwards attended the University of Edinburgh.

  4. Liddell & Scott's Greek-English Lexicon (9/e 1940) is the most comprehensive and up-to-date ancient Greek dictionary in the world. It is used by every student of ancient Greek in the English-speaking world, and is an essential library and scholarly purchase there and in W. Europe and Japan.

  5. Preface 1925. More than eighty years have passed since the first edition of the famous Lexicon upon which the present work is based was published by the Clarendon Press. Henry George Liddell and Robert Scott—the latter a Craven and Ireland Scholar—were both placed in the First Class in the Oxford list of 1833, both having been born in 1811.

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  7. Liddell and Scott go on to refer to the Greek-German lexicon on which they based their work, that of Franz Passow (first edition 1819–24). It was Passow who had urged that a dictionary entry for a word should tell its history, a principle adopted not only by Liddell and Scott but also later on by James Murray for the OED (Considine 2015 ...

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