Machine-readable dictionary (MRD) is a dictionary stored as machine (computer) data instead of being printed on paper. It is an electronic dictionary and lexical database.
A machine-readable dictionary is a dictionary in an electronic
form that can be loaded in a database and can be queried via
application software. It may be a single language explanatory
dictionary or a multi-language dictionary to support translations
between two or more languages or a combination of both. Translation
software between multiple languages usually apply bidirectional
dictionaries. An MRD may be a dictionary with a proprietary
structure that is queried by dedicated software (for example online
via internet) or it can be a dictionary that has an open structure
and is available for loading in computer databases and thus can be
used via various software applications. Conventional dictionaries
contain a lemma with various descriptions. A
machine-readable dictionary may have additional capabilities and is
therefore sometimes called a smart dictionary. An example of a
smart dictionary is the Open Source Gellish English
dictionary.
The term dictionary is also used to refer to an electronic vocabulary or lexicon as used for example in
spelling checkers. If dictionaries are
arranged in a subtype-supertype hierarchy of concepts (or terms)
then it is called a taxonomy. If it also contains other relations
between the concepts, then it is called an ontology. Search engines may use either a
vocabulary, a taxonomy or an ontology to optimise the search
results. Specialised electronic dictionaries are morphological
dictionaries or syntactic dictionaries.
The first widely distributed MRDs were the Merriam-Webster Seventh Collegiate (W7) and the Merriam-Webster New Pocket Dictionary (MPD). Both were produced by a government-funded project at System Development Corporation under the direction of John Olney. They were manually keyboarded as no typesetting tapes of either book were available. Originally each was distributed on multiple reels of magnetic tape as card images with each separate word of each definition on a separate punch card with numerous special codes indicating the details of its usage in the printed dictionary. Olney outlined a grand plan for the analysis of the definitions in the dictionary, but his project expired before the analysis could be carried out. Robert Amsler at the University of Texas at Austin resumed the analysis and completed a taxonomic description of the Pocket Dictionary under NSF funding, however his project expired before the taxonomic data could be distributed. Roy Byrd et al. at IBM Yorktown Heights resumed analysis of the Webster's Seventh Collegiate following Amsler's work. Finally, in the 1980s starting with initial support from Bellcore and later funded by NSF, ARDA, DARPA, DTO, and REFLEX, George Miller and Christiene Fellbaum at Princeton University completed the creation and wide distribution of a dictionary and its taxonomy in the WordNet project, which today stands as the most widely distributed computational lexicology resource.
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