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Difference between revisions of "Dictionary Committee"

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(History: Pate took over for LL, not OSPD4)
(Agenda: Per John Bulten)
 
(38 intermediate revisions by 7 users not shown)
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The [[NSA]] [http://www.scrabbleassociation.com/boards/dictionary/  Dictionary Committee] has not yet been transferred to [[NASPA]]. 
+
{{#naspa:committee-data|dict}}
Its mandate is to update the tournament lexicon, currently consisting of
 
the [[Official Club and Tournament Word List]] for words of up to nine letters
 
and their inflections, and [[Long List]] for longer words.
 
  
 
== Agenda ==
 
== Agenda ==
Line 8: Line 5:
 
The committee will have the following items on its agenda:
 
The committee will have the following items on its agenda:
  
# Update the [[Long List]]
+
# Update the [[NASPA Word List]].
# Update the [[Official Club and Tournament Word List]]
 
# Consider merging both word references
 
 
# Consider including words longer than 15 letters long, for use in [[SuperSCRABBLE]] and [[Anagrams]]
 
# Consider including words longer than 15 letters long, for use in [[SuperSCRABBLE]] and [[Anagrams]]
 
# Liaise with the [[WESPA]] Dictionary Committee to coordinate future updates
 
# Liaise with the [[WESPA]] Dictionary Committee to coordinate future updates
 +
# Prepare its [[Dictionary Committee 2014 Report|annual report]]
 +
# Include long OCD words that were omitted from OTCWL2014
 +
# Consider broad review of implicit inflections, index inflections, and prefix-list inflections.
 +
# Consider including words from Webster's New World (5th edition)
 +
# Consider including words from the American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (4th Edition)
 +
# Consider including words from specialist dictionaries (starting with MW Legal)
  
 
== History ==
 
== History ==
Line 18: Line 19:
 
New York chess club players adopted Funk & Wagnalls College Dictionary as
 
New York chess club players adopted Funk & Wagnalls College Dictionary as
 
the first common word reference in the 1960s, leading eventually to its  
 
the first common word reference in the 1960s, leading eventually to its  
adoption as the first official [[SCRABBLE]] by  
+
adoption as the first official [[SCRABBLE]] dictionary by  
 
[[SCRABBLE Crossword Game Players]] (the predecessor of the NSA).
 
[[SCRABBLE Crossword Game Players]] (the predecessor of the NSA).
  
Line 38: Line 39:
 
* G & C. Merriam's Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, 8th edition, 1973
 
* G & C. Merriam's Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, 8th edition, 1973
 
* Random House College Dictionary, 1968
 
* Random House College Dictionary, 1968
* Webster's New World Dictionary, 2nd College Edition, 1970
+
* Webster's New World Dictionary, 2nd College Edition, 1970 (though no words from this source only were included in the first OSPD)
 +
 
  
 
OSPD was officially adopted on October 1, 1978.
 
OSPD was officially adopted on October 1, 1978.
Line 45: Line 47:
 
ninth edition of Merriam-Webster Collegiate Dictionary and the third edition of Webster's
 
ninth edition of Merriam-Webster Collegiate Dictionary and the third edition of Webster's
 
New World Dictionary.
 
New World Dictionary.
His changes took effect in 1990 with the publication of OSPD2,
+
His changes took effect in 1990 with the publication of [[OSPD2]],
 
the second edition of the Official SCRABBLE Players Dictionary.
 
the second edition of the Official SCRABBLE Players Dictionary.
  
Line 57: Line 59:
 
In September 1996, the NSA officially created its Dictionary
 
In September 1996, the NSA officially created its Dictionary
 
Committee and named [[John Chew]] its first chair.  The committee
 
Committee and named [[John Chew]] its first chair.  The committee
prepared the first edition of the [[Official Club and Tournament Word List]] (OCTWL1), which corrected some errors, consisted only
+
prepared the first edition of the [[Official Tournament and Club Word List]] (OTCWL1), which corrected some errors, consisted only
 
of a word list without definitions, and included words of nine
 
of a word list without definitions, and included words of nine
 
letters (and not just the OSPD's maximum eight). It took effect
 
letters (and not just the OSPD's maximum eight). It took effect
Line 64: Line 66:
  
 
[[Jim Pate]] became the committee’s second chair, and
 
[[Jim Pate]] became the committee’s second chair, and
over the following years compiled the first North
+
over the following years the committee compiled the first North
 
American word reference of longer words, the [[Long List]] (LL).   
 
American word reference of longer words, the [[Long List]] (LL).   
 
This list
 
This list
 
extended the tournament lexicon to the longest playable words of
 
extended the tournament lexicon to the longest playable words of
 
15 letters, and took effect on June 16, 2003, replacing Merriam-Webster's
 
15 letters, and took effect on June 16, 2003, replacing Merriam-Webster's
Collegiate Dictionary as the reference for longer words.
+
Collegiate Dictionary as the reference for longer words. The other members of the Dictionary Committee who completed the work on the Long List were: [[James Cherry]], [[John Chew]], [[Lynn Cushman]], [[Peter Huszagh]], [[Bob Lipton]], [[Joey Mallick]], and [[Loren Mitchell]].
  
Pate continued working on OSPD4 and OCTWL2,
+
The Dictionary Committee continued working on OSPD4 and OTCWL2,
 
which returned to earlier OSPD traditions by including newly added words
 
which returned to earlier OSPD traditions by including newly added words
 
from multiple source dictionaries:
 
from multiple source dictionaries:
  
 
* American Heritage College Dictionary (4th edition),  
 
* American Heritage College Dictionary (4th edition),  
* Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary (11th edition)
+
* Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary (11th edition, 2003 printing)
 
* Random House Webster’s College Dictionary (2nd revised and updated edition, 2000)  
 
* Random House Webster’s College Dictionary (2nd revised and updated edition, 2000)  
 
* Webster's New World College Dictionary (4th edition)
 
* Webster's New World College Dictionary (4th edition)
 +
  
 
OSPD4 was published in 2005, and  
 
OSPD4 was published in 2005, and  
OCTWL2 took effect on March 1st,
+
OTCWL2 took effect on March 1st,
2006, and is the current word reference for club and tournament
+
2006.
play in North America.
+
The complete list of two-letter to eight-letter words added in OTCWL2 was published in the [[SCRABBLE News]] newsletter. It is not available in electronic form, for copyright and other reasons. The [[Official_SCRABBLE_Players_Dictionary#Changes_between_OSPD3_and_OSPD4|list of changes to OSPD4]] is freely available and may be of some use to tournament players.
The complete list of words added in OCTWL2 was published in the [[SCRABBLE News]] newsletter. It is not available in electronic form, for copyright and other reasons. The [[Official_SCRABBLE_Players_Dictionary#Changes_between_OSPD3_and_OSPD4|list of changes to OSPD4]] is freely available and may be of some use to tournament players.
+
 
 +
In 2009, the NSA Dictionary Committee was dissolved, and its members became
 +
the NASPA Dictionary Committee, carrying on their original mission.
 +
 
 +
In [[Dictionary Committee 2014 Report|2014]], the NASPA Dictionary Committee prepared a major new edition of the word list,
 +
called the [[OTCWL2014|Official Tournament and Club Word List (2014 Edition)]], abbreviated variously as OWL2014,
 +
OTCWL2014 or TWL2014. For the first time, the word list included all acceptable words
 +
up to 15 letters in length, and also words from the Oxford College Dictionary (2nd edition) and the
 +
Canadian Oxford Dictionary (2nd edition).
 +
 
 +
In 2016, the DC prepared a minor update to the word list, the
 +
[[OTCWL2016|Official Tournament and Club Word List (2016 Edition)]] (OTCWL2016, etc.). This incorporated errata from the 2014 edition, and added nine-letter words and inflections from the Canadian Oxford Dictionary (2nd edition).
 +
 
 +
In 2018, the DC developed and edited the [[NWL2018 |NASPA Word List 2018 Edition]].
 +
 
 +
In 2020, the DC prepared the [[NWL2020 |NASPA Word List 2020 Edition]] in response to a mandate from the Executive Committee to remove offensive slurs.
 +
 
 +
[[Category:Committees]]

Latest revision as of 21:09, 1 October 2023

The Dictionary Committee is a NASPA committee. Its mandate is to maintain the tournament lexicon. To contact the committee, please send an email message to dictionary@scrabbleplayers.org.

Members

The following members currently belong to the committee:

[photo of Judy Cole]
ex officio
2019-07-22~
[photo of John Bulten]
2019-01-08~
[photo of Joshua Pepper]
2022-11-21~
2022-11-21~
[photo of John Chew]
acting chair
2014-09-24~
[photo of James Cherry]
inactive
2009-03-04~
[photo of George MacAulay (EX)]
inactive
2013-01-05~
[photo of Paul Mulik]
inactive
2014-10-06~
[photo of Tina Yates]
inactive
2015-03-09~
[photo of Chris Grubb (EX)]
2023-11-27~
[photo of Linda Iannetti]
2020-07-12~

The following members have served past terms on the committee:

[photo of John Bulten] John Bulten
1996-09-01~1998-06-30
[photo of Sally Ricketts] Sally Ricketts
2004-01-01~2004-12-31
[photo of Joe Edley (SM)] Joe Edley (SM)
2009-03-04~2009-03-26
[photo of Jim Pate] Jim Pate
chair
2009-03-04~2014-09-02
[photo of Jim Pate] Jim Pate
cochair
2014-09-02~2014-09-21
[photo of John Chew] John Chew
2009-03-04~2014-09-24
[photo of Robert Gillis] Robert Gillis
2009-03-04~2014-10-06
[photo of Robert Gillis] Robert Gillis
inactive
2014-10-06~2022-12-01
[photo of Bob Lipton] Bob Lipton
2009-03-04~2014-10-06
[photo of Bob Lipton] Bob Lipton
inactive
2014-10-06~2022-12-01
Peter R Huszagh
2009-03-04~2014-10-06
Peter R Huszagh
inactive
2014-10-06~2022-12-01
[photo of Chris Cree (SM)] Chris Cree (SM)
ex officio
2009-03-04~2019-07-22
[photo of Timothy Bottorff (EX)] Timothy Bottorff (EX)
2011-01-25~2020-07-12
[photo of Adam Henderson] Adam Henderson
2012-02-07~2012-08-21
[photo of Paul Mulik] Paul Mulik
2012-03-18~2014-10-06
[photo of Anna Miransky] Anna Miransky
2012-09-27~2018-08-14
[photo of Matthew Tunnicliffe (SM)] Matthew Tunnicliffe (SM)
2012-10-16~2014-10-06
[photo of Matthew Tunnicliffe (SM)] Matthew Tunnicliffe (SM)
inactive
2014-10-06~2022-12-01
[photo of Chris Lipe (SM)] Chris Lipe (SM)
2012-12-05~2014-09-02
[photo of Chris Lipe (SM)] Chris Lipe (SM)
cochair
2014-09-02~2014-09-21
[photo of Chris Lipe (SM)] Chris Lipe (SM)
acting chair
2014-09-21~2014-09-24
[photo of Ross Brown (EX)] Ross Brown (EX)
2012-12-30~2022-04-22
[photo of Dallas Johnson] Dallas Johnson
ex officio
2013-01-01~2015-08-15
[photo of Kurt Davies] Kurt Davies
2013-02-24~2014-10-06
[photo of Kurt Davies] Kurt Davies
inactive
2014-10-06~2022-12-01
[photo of Rich Baker] Rich Baker
ex officio
2016-11-29~2021-06-30
[photo of Jacob Cohen] Jacob Cohen
2022-11-21~2023-01-14


Agenda

The committee will have the following items on its agenda:

  1. Update the NASPA Word List.
  2. Consider including words longer than 15 letters long, for use in SuperSCRABBLE and Anagrams
  3. Liaise with the WESPA Dictionary Committee to coordinate future updates
  4. Prepare its annual report
  5. Include long OCD words that were omitted from OTCWL2014
  6. Consider broad review of implicit inflections, index inflections, and prefix-list inflections.
  7. Consider including words from Webster's New World (5th edition)
  8. Consider including words from the American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (4th Edition)
  9. Consider including words from specialist dictionaries (starting with MW Legal)

History

New York chess club players adopted Funk & Wagnalls College Dictionary as the first common word reference in the 1960s, leading eventually to its adoption as the first official SCRABBLE dictionary by SCRABBLE Crossword Game Players (the predecessor of the NSA).

Around 1975, Mike Senkiewicz proposed addressing the major defects of Funk & Wagnalls (idiosyncratic vocabulary, large number of affix lists, and lack of explicit inflection) by compiling an Official SCRABBLE Players Dictionary (OSPD) from five college dictionaries.

The Dictionary Committee has its unofficial roots in the team that 1978 National Champion David Prinz led to edit the first edition of the OSPD. Prinz, along with Jonathan Hatch, Kathy Flaherty and Bernie Teitelbaum, consulted with James Lowe of Merriam-Webster in compiling and defining all suitable words found in the following source lexica:

  • American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, 1969
  • Funk & Wagnalls Standard College Dictionary, 1973
  • G & C. Merriam's Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, 8th edition, 1973
  • Random House College Dictionary, 1968
  • Webster's New World Dictionary, 2nd College Edition, 1970 (though no words from this source only were included in the first OSPD)


OSPD was officially adopted on October 1, 1978.

During the 1980s, Joe Leonard updated the word list based on the ninth edition of Merriam-Webster Collegiate Dictionary and the third edition of Webster's New World Dictionary. His changes took effect in 1990 with the publication of OSPD2, the second edition of the Official SCRABBLE Players Dictionary.

In 1995, Merriam-Webster prepared the third edition — OSPD3 – largely in response to pressure to remove offensive words. Effective February 1st, 1996, the tournament lexicon consisted of OSPD2, plus a small number of words added in OSPD3, but retaining the deleted words.

In September 1996, the NSA officially created its Dictionary Committee and named John Chew its first chair. The committee prepared the first edition of the Official Tournament and Club Word List (OTCWL1), which corrected some errors, consisted only of a word list without definitions, and included words of nine letters (and not just the OSPD's maximum eight). It took effect as the club and tournament lexicon on March 2nd, 1998.

Jim Pate became the committee’s second chair, and over the following years the committee compiled the first North American word reference of longer words, the Long List (LL). This list extended the tournament lexicon to the longest playable words of 15 letters, and took effect on June 16, 2003, replacing Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary as the reference for longer words. The other members of the Dictionary Committee who completed the work on the Long List were: James Cherry, John Chew, Lynn Cushman, Peter Huszagh, Bob Lipton, Joey Mallick, and Loren Mitchell.

The Dictionary Committee continued working on OSPD4 and OTCWL2, which returned to earlier OSPD traditions by including newly added words from multiple source dictionaries:

  • American Heritage College Dictionary (4th edition),
  • Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary (11th edition, 2003 printing)
  • Random House Webster’s College Dictionary (2nd revised and updated edition, 2000)
  • Webster's New World College Dictionary (4th edition)


OSPD4 was published in 2005, and OTCWL2 took effect on March 1st, 2006. The complete list of two-letter to eight-letter words added in OTCWL2 was published in the SCRABBLE News newsletter. It is not available in electronic form, for copyright and other reasons. The list of changes to OSPD4 is freely available and may be of some use to tournament players.

In 2009, the NSA Dictionary Committee was dissolved, and its members became the NASPA Dictionary Committee, carrying on their original mission.

In 2014, the NASPA Dictionary Committee prepared a major new edition of the word list, called the Official Tournament and Club Word List (2014 Edition), abbreviated variously as OWL2014, OTCWL2014 or TWL2014. For the first time, the word list included all acceptable words up to 15 letters in length, and also words from the Oxford College Dictionary (2nd edition) and the Canadian Oxford Dictionary (2nd edition).

In 2016, the DC prepared a minor update to the word list, the Official Tournament and Club Word List (2016 Edition) (OTCWL2016, etc.). This incorporated errata from the 2014 edition, and added nine-letter words and inflections from the Canadian Oxford Dictionary (2nd edition).

In 2018, the DC developed and edited the NASPA Word List 2018 Edition.

In 2020, the DC prepared the NASPA Word List 2020 Edition in response to a mandate from the Executive Committee to remove offensive slurs.