OED 20Vol Dictionary
9/26/2007
Product in mint condition. The five cartons arrived within the specified time limits for shipping. Unfortunately, four of the five cartons arrived within three days of purchase and the fifth carton two weeks later, which caused anxiety!
I would recommend the vendor highly.
PeterC
The Best Reference Guide to the English Language
2/1/2008
A terrifically useful reference piece, and of incalculable value to readers, writers, and students of the English language.
Wait for a Killer price like I did
2/5/2008
I just got my set today, so I can't really say anything more about it other than what has been said. Of course this is "the" big one. So if you want the best get this. I have seen other reviews compare getting the two volume set that has 1/3 the words for 1 tenth the price. blah, blah, blah. However it does not have 1/3 the content, just words. I got this set for 382 shipped from amazon brand new. That is right 19 bucks per volume right at 2 pennies per page. AS of right now I am writing this review and the price has already increased back up to 756. Nearly double. I should have bought two and sold one.
Pricey, but with high cost performance
2/24/2008
I'd wanted to get my hands on the OED for years, and I'm glad I finally did. This dictionary is all about fun while learning. Following the etymologies of words, checking cross references, and looking up words in sample sentences leads not only to a greater understanding of a particular word, but of the English language itself. As far as I know, the OED is the only dictionary that really does that, and the OED can truly be considered "complete" in that aspect. It looks wonderful on a bookshelf, makes me want to look up things that I normally wouldn't take the time to, and makes me feel satisfied as I build my language skills. Yes, it is expensive, but you really get what you pay for, and a whole lot more.
The Oxford ENCYCLOPEDIA of the English Language
6/2/2008
This is THE dictionary, or more appropriately, this is the most complete ENCYCLOPEDIA of the English language ever created. With over 600,000 words in its twenty volumes and addenda, the Oxford provides not just exhaustive definitions, but pronounciations, a glossary of quotations, a complete etymology, cognates in virtually all languages, and variants, of each word.
Since its birth in Victorian England under the stewardship of James Murray, the Oxford has been considered definitive. Working with a small staff (including J.R.R. Tolkien in his younger days), Murray's original plan was for a three volume reference. Today, hundreds of lexicographers, philologists, and technicians contribute to the Oxford.
The sensual joy of browsing the hardcover edition is still unmatched, though with the rise of the Internet OED and its virtually instantaneous updates, the hardback edition is relegated to the same status as legal Case Reporters---attractive on the shelf, but less practical than online researching. (Legal publishers now often include a set of Case Reporters free with online subscriptions, knowing that clients like to see books on the shelves.)
The OED books (with the addenda) work out to about a $1,000.00 investment. Updates are additional. The Online OED is about $300 a year for individuals. Updates are included. So, in terms of price, the difference between the two seems to be a wash.
If you're a bibliophile, buy the hardback, but if the OED is going to be a working tool, go online. In the best of all possible worlds, buy both.