User talk:Rrokuryook

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Interestinger
The article that you posted as Interestinger doesn't appear to have anything to do with speculative fiction and contains numerous links to unrelated outside sites. I have deleted the article and copied its text here in case you would like to comment on it. Ahasuerus 14:07, 25 Aug 2007 (CDT)


 * It appears to be an irrelevant Wikipedia article. BLongley 18:13, 25 Aug 2007 (CDT)


 * Copying unrelated text from books, articles and Web pages and then embedding spam links is a common spamming tactic, but since this is a first offense and since the user name doesn't follow the pattern used by the spambots, I figured I should give it the benefit of the doubt :) Ahasuerus 22:03, 25 Aug 2007 (CDT)


 * Second offence?
 * (Deletion log); 14:07 . . JVjr (Talk | block) (deleted "Independenter": spam by user:Rrokuryook of apparently Japanese websites with links hidden between random text)
 * I didn't spot the Japanese links as I don't have Japanese extensions installed for my browser, they wouldn't make any more sense to me if I did. :-/ BLongley 14:52, 26 Aug 2007 (CDT)


 * Looks like we have a new spammer joining the ranks :( Oh well... Ahasuerus 19:00, 26 Aug 2007 (CDT)

H1 many quotations as you can for ordinary words" as well as all of those ...... = At the same time the Society had become concerned about the publication of what it was now clear would have to be an immensely large book. Various publishers had been approached over the years, either to produce sample pages or for the possible publication of the whole, but no agreements had been reached. Those approached included both the Cambridge University Press and the OUP.

Finally, in 1879, after two years of negotiations involving Sweet and Furnivall as well as Murray, the OUP agreed not only to publish the dictionary but also to pay Murray (who by this time was also president of the Philological Society) a salary as editor. They planned on publishing the work at intervals in fascicles, its final form consisting of four volumes of some 6,400 pages. They hoped to finish it in about ten years.sunkkattyo

It was Murray who really got the project off the ground and was able to tackle its true scale. Because he had many children论坛群发软件, he chose not to use his house in the London suburb of Mill Hill as a workplace; a corrugated iron outbuilding, which he called the "Scriptorium", lined with wooden planks, was erected for him and his assistants. It was provided with 1,029 pigeon-holes for filing the slips of paper, and many bookshelves.

Murray now tracked down and regathered论坛群发软件 the slips collected by信息群发软件 Furnivall, but he found them inadequate because readers had focused on rare and interesting 博客群发软件 words: he had ten times more quotations for abusion than for abuse. He therefore issued a new appeal for readers, which was widely published in newspapers and distributed in bookshops and libraries. This time readers were specifically asked to report "as many quotations as you can for ordinary words" as well as all of those that seemed "rare, obsolete, old-fashioned, new, peculiar or used in a peculiar way." Murray arranged for the American philologist and liberal-arts-college professor, Francis March, to manage the process in North America. Soon 1,000 slips per day were arriving at the Scriptorium, and by 1882 there were 3,500,000 of them.

It was February 1, 1884, 23 years after Coleridge's sample pages, when the first portion, or fascicle, of the Dictionary was published. The full title had now become A New English Dictionary on Historical Principles; Founded Mainly on the Materials Collected by The Philological Society, and the 352-page volume, covering words from A to Ant, was priced at 12s.6d. The total sales were a disappointing 4,000 copies.

It was now clear to the OUP that it would take much too long to completeof chinese群发软件the work if the editorial arrangements were not revised. Accordingly群发软件 they supplied additional funding for assistants, but made two new demands on Murray in return. The first was that he move from Mill Hill to Oxford, which he did in 1885. Again he had a Scriptorium built on his property (to appease a neighbour, this one had to be half-buried in the ground), and the Post Office installed a pillar box directly in front of his house.

The house at 78 Banbury Road, Oxford, erstwhile residence of James Murray, editor of the Oxford English Dictionary. Note the pillar box in front of the house.Murray was more resistant to the second requirement: that if he could not meet the desired schedule, then he must hire a second senior editor who would work in parallel, outside his supervision, on words from different parts of the alphabet. He did not want to share the work, and felt that it would eventually go faster as he gained experience. But it did not, and eventually Philip Gell of the OUP forced his hand. Henry Bradley, whom Murray had hired as his assistant in 1884, was promoted and began working independently in 1888, in a room at the British Museum in London. In 1896 Bradley moved to Oxford, working at the university itself.

Gell continued to harass网站推广软件 both editors with the commercial信息群发软件 goal of containing 群发软件costs and speeding production, to the point where the project seemed likely to collapse; but once this was reported in the press, public opinion backed the editors. Gell was then dismissed, and the university reversed his policies on containing costs. If the editors felt that the Dictionary would have to grow larger than had been anticipated, then it would; it was an important enough work that the time and money necessary to finish it properly should be spent.

But neither Murray nor Bradley lived to see it done. Murray died in 1915, having been responsible 博客群发软件 for words starting with A-D, H-K, O-P and T, or nearly half of the finished信息群发软件 dictionary; Bradley died in 1923, having done E-G, L-M, S-Sh, St and W-We. By this time two additional editors had also been promoted from assistant positions to work independently, so the work continued群发软件 without too much trouble. William Craigie, starting in 1901, was responsible for N, Q-R, Si-Sq, U-V and Wo-Wy; whereas the OUP had previously felt that London was too far from Oxford for the editors to work there, after 1925 Craigie's work on the dictionary was done in Chicago, where he had accepted a professorship. The fourth editor was C. T. Onions, who, starting in 1914, covered the remaining ranges, Su-Sz, Wh-Wo and X-Z.