Laurence Urdang
Laurence Urdang | |
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Born |
Manhattan, New York City | March 21, 1927
Died |
August 26, 2008 81) Branford, Connecticut | (aged
Known for | Lexicographer, editor of dictionaries |
Laurence Urdang (March 21, 1927 – August 26, 2008) was a lexicographer, editor and author noted for first computerising the unabridged Random House Dictionary of the English Language, published in 1966. He was also the founding editor of Verbatim, a quarterly newsletter on language.
Urdang was born in Manhattan and graduated from the Fieldston School in The Bronx. He then entered the Naval Reserve at the end of World War 2.[1]
Educated at Columbia University (where he restricted himself to Russian, German, Latin, Greek, Sanskrit and Polish), Urdang was a linguistics lecturer at New York University from 1956 to 1961. Although he never wrote the dissertation that would have completed his graduate degree, the Random House Dictionary filled the void amply: "He always said he considered the Random House dictionary his dissertation," said Nicole Urdang.[2]
Urdang made his debut in the publishing industry as an associate editor in the dictionary department at Funk & Wagnalls and developed a vast vocabulary. Not averse to making fun of his profession, he wrote in the introduction to Misunderstood, Misused, & Mispronounced Words:
This is not a succedaneum for satisfying the nympholepsy of nullifidians. Rather it is hoped that the haecceity of this enchiridion of arcane and recondite sesquipedalian items will appeal to the oniomania of an eximious Gemeinschaft whose legerity and sophrosyne, whose Sprachgefühl and orexis will find more than fugacious fulfillment among its felicific pages.
He died on August 21, 2008, of congestive heart failure in Branford, Connecticut.[1]
Bibliography
- Urdang, Laurence: New York Times Dictionary of Misunderstood, Misused, & Mispronounced Words. New York: Black Dog & Leventhal Publishers. ISBN 978-1-57912-060-3.
Notes
- 1 2 Weber, Bruce, "Laurence Urdang, Language Expert Who Edited Dictionaries, Dies at 81," The New York Times, 2008-08-26.
- ↑ Quoted in Weber 2008.
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