Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Macmillan English Dictionary for Advanced Learners, also known as MEDAL, is an advanced learner's dictionary first published in 2002 by Macmillan Education. It shares most of the features of this type of dictionary: it provides definitions in simple language, using a controlled defining vocabulary; most words have example sentences to ...

    • Introduction
    • The Case For Using A Dictionary
    • It’S Not Just About Meanings
    • Phrases Are Just as Important as Words
    • Keeping Up with Language Change
    • Conclusion

    With so much information available on the web, does anyone really need to consult a dictionary when they want to find out about a word or phrase? It’s a good question. Just about everything you would ever need to know about words and language can be found online – somewhere. But – as with everything else on the web – you need to know what you’re ge...

    Macmillan Dictionary is just celebrating its 10th birthday as a digital resource. It’s great that most dictionaries are now online. This is a much better medium than the printed books of old: there are no limitations of space, and an online dictionary can always stay up to date and explain even the newest additions to the language. But with so much...

    But this is only half the story. We may want to check what a word means, but if we want to use the word ourselves when we write or speak, we need to know how it behaves. In the last 30 years or so, our understanding of language has been revolutionized by the availability of huge language databases (called ’corpora’) which can be analysed using powe...

    Corpus evidence shows that people often ‘lexicalize’ their thoughts (that is, put meanings into words) using a multiword expression rather than a single word. Phrasal verbs are an obvious example: in most contexts, stick out is a more natural choice than protrude, and we’re more likely to say put up with than tolerate. Neither expression has any ob...

    All languages change over time, and as one of the world’s major languages, English is changing faster than most. Being online means that dictionaries can add new words and phrases as they emerge – but (as we saw in the case of traction) not all of them do. The Macmillan Dictionary team use smart corpus software to help us identify new uses, but we ...

    Dictionaries aren’t like other learning materials (or other books, or other data sources). We don’t read them – we usethem when we’re doing something else. And when we’ve found the information we need, we go back to the task we’re engaged in. For this process to work effectively: 1. you have to be able to find what you’re looking for, fast; 2. you ...

  2. The Macmillan Dictionary app provides a comprehensive reference of the English language for the general user, with access to: • more than 60,000 words and phrases. • audio pronunciations. • word origins. • usage notes. • example sentences and phrases. • idiomatic phrases.

    • Reference
    • 119.6 MB
    • Pan Macmillan Australia Pty Ltd
  3. Macmillan Dictionary Online, which will be replacing the print edition, provides an English dictionary and thesaurus, as well as a popular blog and weekly ‘Buzzword’ column on newly-emerging words and the crowd-sourced ‘Open Dictionary ’.

  4. People also ask

  5. Using a corpus of over 200 million words collected from contemporary written and spoken sources, Macmillan English Dictionary gives the most up-to-date information available about the meanings...

  6. ELT Digital Publishing. Home. English Language Teaching. ELT Digital Publishing. Keeping ahead of the changing trends, Macmillan Education continuously designs innovative digital learning resources, to create disruptive transformations in teaching and learning methodologies and styles.

  1. People also search for