Bill Bryson's Dictionary for Writers and Editors

Reference

What is the difference between cant and jargon, or assume and presume? What is a fandango? What's the new name for Calcutta? How do you spell supersede? Boutros Boutros-Ghali? Is it hippy or hippie? These questions really matter to Bill Bryson, ever since his days as a rookie subeditor on "The Times" back in the 1970s: as they do to anyone who cares about the English language.Originally published as "The Penguin Dictionary for Writers and Editors", Bryson's "Dictionary for Writers and Editors" has now been completely revised and updated for the twenty-first century by Bill Bryson himself. Here is a very personal selection of spellings and usages, covering such head-scratchers as capitalization, plurals, abbreviations and foreign names and phrases. Bryson also gives us the difference between British and American usages, and miscellaneous pieces of essential information you never knew you needed, like the names of all the Oxford colleges, or the new name for the Department of Trade and Industry - or the correct spelling of Brobdingnag. First published 1991 as the Penguin Dictionary for Writers and Editors; this revised edition 2008.

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A very personal reference tool from the desk of bestselling author Bill Bryson.

General Fields

  • : Transworld Publishers Ltd
  • : Doubleday
  • : 9780385610445
  • : February 2008
  • : 0.536
  • : 206mm X 131mm X 42mm
  • : games