Talk:Dictionaries

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Revision as of 12:36, 29 February 2008 by Fasten (talk | contribs)
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Dictionaries and Copyright

It looks as if I will be the first to post on this talk page. This is appropriate as the subject is quite fundamental to the OLPC dictionary project and where it is (or is not) heading.

The list of dictionaries available for StarDict is quite short. This is roughly the list of dictionaries that have been available in the Free Software world for the last decade or so. Why is it that this list has not grown over the last decade?

As I brought up on IRC, no current copyright law could govern a work created before 1900, and there is little or no doubt that nearly every language in existence had dictionaries before then. The first Chinese dictionaries were created around 100AD. European dictionaries started appearing some 3 to 5 hundred years ago. During the 1800's missionaries compiled dictionaries of many, many languages. Copyright was not automagic back then, either.

The only reasonable conclusion is that there are Public Domain dictionaries in nearly every conceivable language, and that these dictionaries merely need to be digitized in order to be used. Many of these dictionaries use the Latin alphabet which is well supported by many Free and Non-Free OCR programs. Why are we, then, limited to a few dictionaries in English and wordlists of similar terms in a handful of languages?

I hope for the sake of the OLPC project, that this issue can be quickly resolved.

-- LuYu

OmegaWiki: Connotations

An interesting feature would be to link connotations of a word A to specific connotations of another word B in the same language or in another language. Many dictionaries leave the user with a superset of the connotations of all possible translations instead, which has to be reduced by ruling out false translations. To be able to link to a specific connotation by name connotations would have to be named and (preferrably) allow markup for existing and non-existing links, like internal wikipedia links. [OmegaWiki] --Fasten 07:09, 29 February 2008 (EST)

Wikifier

A Wikifier for Browse could cooperate with the dictionary software and collect a database of personal vocabulary. The browse application could also allow to highlight all previously memorized words on a page, which would allow a reader to verify if a word should be known before looking it up. The database could also store the occasion (document, page) where a word had (first) been looked up, which might help to memorize the word based on the context. --Fasten 07:36, 29 February 2008 (EST)