Perhaps
the world’s most famous lexicographer, Susie Dent is certainly one of
the most positive people on British TV. For 31 years the queen of
dictionary corner on Channel 4’s Countdown,
she puts just as much energy into her books: from her first, the 2003
Language Report for Oxford University Press, to Weird Words (2013), an
unapologetic compendium of farting and squelching. She even finds the
fun in current events, through her regular “word of the day” posts on
Twitter. Recent examples include “‘boodlery’ (19th century):
unprincipled behaviour in public office”, and, on the day Donald Trump
was arrested, “‘mugshot’: the use of ‘mug’ for a face looks back to
18th-century drinking mugs that often represented a grotesque human face
… ”We meet in a cafe on a rainy July day, where she is sitting – as is her
habit – in a corner, enthusiastically digging into a second breakfast.
She often sits quietly on her own in a coffee shop, she says. “It’s
probably against the law to eavesdrop as much as I do. It really is for
linguistic purposes, not for gossip. But you can pick up some gems.” Katy Guest, The Guardian
sull'interessante lavoro del/la lessicografo/a. E anche il profilo dei finalisti al Booker Prize (nella foto): Esi Edugyan, The Guardian
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