Internet age may spell end to print edition of Oxford English Dictionary

It’s been in print for over a century, but in future the Oxford English Dictionary–the authoritative guide to the English language–may only be available online. Oxford University Press, the publisher, said Sunday that burgeoning demand for the dictionary’s online version has far outpaced demand for the printed versions. By the time the lexicographers behind the […]

It’s been in print for over a century, but in future the Oxford English Dictionary–the authoritative guide to the English language–may only be available online.

Oxford University Press, the publisher, said Sunday that burgeoning demand for the dictionary’s online version has far outpaced demand for the printed versions.

By the time the lexicographers behind the dictionary finish revising and updating the latest edition–a gargantuan task that will take many more years–publishers are doubtful there will still be a market for the printed form.

The online Oxford English Dictionary now gets 2 million hits a month from subscribers. The current printed edition–a hefty 20-volume, 750 pound ($1,165) set published in 1989–has sold about 30,000 sets in total.

“At present we are experiencing increasing demand for the online product,” a statement from the publisher said. “However, a print version will certainly be considered if there is sufficient demand at the time of publication.”

Nigel Portwood, chief executive of Oxford University Press, told The Sunday Times in an interview he didn’t think the newest edition will be printed. “The print dictionary market is just disappearing,” he said.

His comment related primarily to the full-length dictionary, but Portwood said the convenience of the electronic format also is affecting demand for its shorter dictionaries.

It’s too early to predict whether digital dictionaries will completely wipe out the printed format, and Portwood stressed that Oxford University Press has no plans to stop publishing print dictionaries. Still, more and more people are taking advantage of the speed and ease of using the online version, which charges a subscription fee of $295 a year in America.

Launched in 2000, the online Oxford also makes it easier for its publisher to catch up with rapid semantic changes and the large numbers of new words.

Editors put updates out every three months. In March, for example, they added words such as “techy” and “superbug” to the online version.

The dictionary was first published in parts starting in 1884. It kept growing for decades until the complete text went out in 1928, 70 years after preparations first began.

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