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Webster’s 1913 Dictionary for macOS

103 points| cmod | 4 years ago |github.com | reply

41 comments

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[+] cosmojg|4 years ago|reply
For those who want to know why this is important, check out this blog post: https://jsomers.net/blog/dictionary

For those who want to give it a try on other operating systems, check out this website: https://www.websters1913.com/

[+] kragen|4 years ago|reply
Probably worth pointing out that dict, dictd, and web1913 have been included with Debian since last millennium. (The dict markup shows in the screenshot on https://jsomers.net/blog/dictionary; dict and vh are the things that use {} to delimit references to other entries. Even the line breaks are preserved.) They don't have the nice CSS tho.
[+] exitb|4 years ago|reply
That was quite informative, although to me, as a non-native English speaker, the basic descriptions are often more useful. It seems to make sense for the definition to be written in simpler terms then the term it defines. But I can see the appeal for someone looking to make their use of language less blunt.
[+] ggm|4 years ago|reply
I love having an OSX embedded dictionary but boy-o-boy, I hate how easily it appears I trigger it, highlighting words for a right-click function other than "look it up in the dictionary"

Dammit, I just wanted to right click "Web search" that term. Now.. I have to remember how to make this dictionary popover disappear, and keep the selection.

[+] scoopr|4 years ago|reply
The two ways I know to trigger it is hovering over a word and pressing ctrl-cmd-d, or force-touching the trackpad. So I suppose you are accidentally pushing too hard so it triggers the force-touch?

If you don't like it, you can disable the force touch in the trackpad settings. It seems you can also set it to be three-finger-tap on the touchpad.

[+] wazoox|4 years ago|reply
In French, always the Littré: https://www.littre.org/

The exact opposite of dry, modern dictionary, you can read it along for the quality of its prose, and its numerous and interesting quotes.

[+] spidersouris|4 years ago|reply
Personally, I find the TFLi (Trésor de la Langue français informatisé)[1] to be much more complete, the biggest advantages being that it includes various locutions and specifies grammatical rules.

[1] https://www.cnrtl.fr/definition/

[+] linguae|4 years ago|reply
Dictionary.app is one of my favorite macOS programs; I use it regularly, and Dictionary.app is something that I miss whenever I'm not on my Mac.

I'm wondering if there are similar offline dictionaries available for Windows and Linux? I know at one point the Oxford English Dictionary was distributed on CD-ROM, but the CD-ROM version is unfortunately discontinued and access requires an online subscription. I also remember Microsoft Bookshelf from the 1990s, but that's also been long discontinued.

I know that there are plenty of nice dictionaries and other references on the Web, but I like using offline dictionaries for a handful of reasons, chiefly: 1. Having offline access is handy when my Internet connection is down. 2. The latency of doing a lookup on Dictionary.app is much lower than looking up a Web dictionary. 3. Not being bombarded with other media to keep me engaged on the site (I'm looking at you, merriam-webster.com).

I would love to pay a company like Merriam Webster or Oxford University Press for downloadable access to the dictionary database, and I'm willing to pay the same price as the equivalent printed dictionary. However, I understand the business motivation as to why this may not be possible: it would be easy to pirate dictionary databases, and it possibly more lucrative to place the database behind either a subscription paywall or on a website with ads.

[+] feupan|4 years ago|reply
You just reminded me of Babylon.exe, a program that I used back on Windows 98SE/Me/XP, that would work on any part of the screen.

Apparently it’s still a thing! https://www.babylon-software.com/

Besides that, yeah, there’s so much content on The Information Highway but the signal to noise ratio is through the roof.

[+] LTom|4 years ago|reply
I use GoldenDict on Linux.

Unfortunately, the Webster's 1913 dictionary I use with that software (downloaded from a link in Somers' blog post) lacks the markup of this Mac version. And while GoldenDict supports many dictionary file formats, Apple's isn't among them.

[+] KarlKemp|4 years ago|reply
I'm wondering if it would make sense to build an transformer for Dash dockets to the dictionary format.
[+] warning26|4 years ago|reply
Microsoft Bookshelf was so cool, and should have been a built-in Windows tool!
[+] rrevo|4 years ago|reply
If you're looking for an alternative dictionary on mobile, check out Vedaist (https://www.vedaist.com/). The dictionary entries are based on Wiktionary (https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Wiktionary:Main_Page) and I'd expect more modern meanings compared to the Webster's 1913. The UI is a subjective choice though.

The mac default dictionary is great for offline use and passive learning. With vedaist features are geared towards active learning with gamification.

Disclosure; I'm the creator of the Vedaist project.

[+] Lammy|4 years ago|reply
Does Vedaist for mobile support fully offline usage? I really really dislike being spied on every time I use a dictionary that's hooked up to some API. I bought Dictionary-dot-com Pro a few years ago because it was the only such app I could find for iOS, but then they removed the offline functionality I paid for in a 2.0 release anyway :/
[+] divbzero|4 years ago|reply
I didn’t realize you could add custom dictionaries to the Dictionary app on macOS. Can something similar be done for iOS and iPadOS?