<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<course>
  <academic-career-val type="integer">1</academic-career-val>
  <assumed-knowledge-and-required-skills></assumed-knowledge-and-required-skills>
  <available-through-customised-graduate-programs type="integer" nil="true"></available-through-customised-graduate-programs>
  <co-teaching-course-id type="integer" nil="true"></co-teaching-course-id>
  <consent-description></consent-description>
  <consent-required type="boolean">false</consent-required>
  <corequisites></corequisites>
  <cost-considerations></cost-considerations>
  <course-code>LING2023</course-code>
  <course-description>Dictionaries are the most widely-used source of information about languages. This course introduces the craft of dictionary-making, and looks at questions about the nature of languages and their descriptions that arise when making a dictionary. The course will focus both on existing lexicographic materials (e.g. various kinds of dictionaries of major world languages) and on the task of making dictionaries of undescribed languages from scratch (particularly for languages of indigenous Australia and the Western Pacific). </course-description>
  <course-group nil="true"></course-group>
  <eligibility></eligibility>
  <filled-flag type="integer">1</filled-flag>
  <first-year-course type="boolean">false</first-year-course>
  <id type="integer">12533</id>
  <incompatibility></incompatibility>
  <indicative-assessment>&lt;p&gt;(a) Problem/critique of selected existing lexicographic resources (definitions; organization) (15%) due at end of 4th week&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;(b) a 2500 word essay due at end of Week 9 (35%)&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;(c) Lexicographic project (group work available as an option) due at end of final week (50%)&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;</indicative-assessment>
  <indicative-reading-list>Frawley, Hill &amp;amp; Munro. 2002. Making dictionaries. Preserving indigenous languages of the Americas. U Chicago Press. &lt;p&gt;Austin, Peter. Australian Aboriginal Lexicography. Evans, Nicholas. Main peculiarities of the vocabularies of Australian languages. Haimam, John, Dictionaries and Encyclopaedias; Hale, Ken, The Warlpiri Dictionary Project,&amp;nbsp; Pawley, Andrew, Grammarian&amp;#39;s lexicon; Lexicographer&amp;#39;s lexicon; Wierzbicka, Anna Back to definitions; Landau, S. What is a dictionary&lt;/p&gt;</indicative-reading-list>
  <is-active type="integer">1</is-active>
  <is-public type="integer">1</is-public>
  <learning-outcomes>On completing this course, students will have &lt;p&gt;(a) a clear understanding of the central design issues in lexicography&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;(b) an acquaintance with&amp;nbsp; some relevant software for dictionary-making&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;(c) skill in searching language corpora for relevant material&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;(d) rigour in the formulation of dictionary definitions for English and other languages relevant to their interests&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;(e) an understanding of how lexical entries relate to semantic and grammatical analysis, sociolinguistic variation, etymology and broader encyclopaedic knowledge&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;(f) an understanding of the history and likely future developments in lexicography&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;(g) an understanding of the role of dictionaries in translation and language teaching&lt;/p&gt;</learning-outcomes>
  <lock-version type="integer">9</lock-version>
  <long-title>Dictionaries and Dictionary-Making</long-title>
  <max-units type="integer">6</max-units>
  <min-units type="integer">6</min-units>
  <other-information></other-information>
  <preliminary-reading>Relevant readings will be posted online before the course</preliminary-reading>
  <prescribed-texts>Atkins, Sue &amp;amp; Michael Rundell. 2008. The Oxford Guide to Practical Lexicography. Oxford: OUP. Other relevant readings will be posted online during the course</prescribed-texts>
  <progress-units type="integer">6</progress-units>
  <quota></quota>
  <recommended-courses></recommended-courses>
  <requisite-statement>&lt;p&gt;At least 4 semester-subjects or equivalent of linguistic study, including at least one semester of semantics.&lt;/p&gt;</requisite-statement>
  <restricted-program-entry type="integer" nil="true"></restricted-program-entry>
  <short-title>Dictionaries</short-title>
  <student-contribution-band>Band 1</student-contribution-band>
  <subject>Linguistics</subject>
  <technology-requirements>Materials will be made available online. It will simplify the running of the course if students can bring a laptop to the workshops. </technology-requirements>
  <updated-by>u9803255</updated-by>
  <version type="integer">10</version>
  <workload>&lt;p&gt;11 classes in a weekly block of 3 hours duration (the course will start in Wk 3 of Semester 2), plus 6 1-hour tutorial meetings over the semester.&amp;nbsp; Students can expect to work 5-7 additional hrs/week&lt;/p&gt;</workload>
  <year type="integer">2010</year>
</course>
