The OED thirdĮdition, which can be seen online as so far drafted, is now at last When its second edition transferred to the IPA alphabet. It adopted a system of excessive complexity which remained until 1989 Pronunciation notation, the basis of this Association's alphabet, but That work should better have used Sweet's Romic Weakly compete with large general dictionaries such as the OED ( OxfordĮnglish Dictionary). Matches EPD's provision of a CD-ROM "with all words and phrases spokenĪloud in both British and American English". ODP is like LPD except for being (1.5 cm) thicker. Inĭimensions EPD and LPD are the same except that LPD is slightly (1 cm) The LPD extra headwords have not increased its bulk. This review will compare it briefly with the two otherĮquivalent works available: EPD, the Cambridge English Pronouncingĭictionary and ODP, the Oxford Dictionary of Pronunciation for CurrentĢ. Though it incorporates 3,000 new headwords and a variety of modest This second revision involves no fundamental changes This version incorporates some very slight changes from the original one which appeared in 2009 in Vol 39 No 2 of the Journal of the International Phonetic Association published and copyright by Cambridge University Pressĭictionary, in brief LPD, appeared originally in 1990 and was first
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