I found one such, published in 1962 (which is also quite a while ago now!) recently in an Oxfam bookshop - what a bargain for £2.49, hardback and all. My other version, published in the 1930s and updated by the grandson of Roget, has an interesting page layout, in which pairs of words (opposites) start at the same point on the page - for instance, obstinacy and tergiversation; perspicuity and obscurity; conciseness and diffuseness -
Via a little research on the idea of a thesaurus (the word comes from the Greek, meaning "treasure store"), I found the Historical Thesaurus of English project, which presents the vocabulary of English from Old English to the present arranged in detailed semantic categories. It is based on the second edition of the Oxford English Dictionary and was published in two volumes as the Historical Thesaurus of the OED by Oxford University Press in 2009. It offers "a complete sense inventory for English".
Here is an overview of the classification:
1. The External World
01. The world
01.01. The earth
01.02. Life
01.03. Physical sensibility
01.04. Matter
01.05. Existence in time and
space
01.06. Relative properties
01.07. The supernatural
2. The Mental World
02. The mind
02.01. Mental capacity
02.02. Emotion
02.03. Philosophy
02.04. Aesthetics
02.05. Will/faculty of will
02.06. Refusal/denial
02.07. Having/possession
02.08. Language
3. The Social World
03.
Society
03.01.
Society/the community
03.02.
Inhabiting/dwelling
03.03.
Armed hostility
03.04.
Authority
03.05.
Morality
03.06.
Education
03.07.
Faith
03.08.
Communication
03.09.
Travel/travelling
03.10.
Occupation/work
03.11.
Leisure
See a sample page - from the Emotions section, lovers and loving, here. Once, an elegant love letter was called a "nectar epistle" ... and whatever happened to "kissing kind" - meaning, being kind/friendly enough to receive a kiss -?
The HTOED usefully also gives definitions of words. It runs to 4,000 pages - and is incorporated into the OED online version.
The HTOED usefully also gives definitions of words. It runs to 4,000 pages - and is incorporated into the OED online version.
Roget's is my favorite book, as well. And while I prefer the original format, and have one of those I use often, I did pick up a 1936 edition of the Thesaurus Dictionary recently, along with a bunch of other books, in a buck-a-bag sale during the summer.
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