A Greek–English Lexicon
A Greek-English Lexicon is the standard lexicographical work of the ancient Greek language, begun in the nineteenth century and now in its ninth (revised) edition.
It was edited by Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, Henry Stuart Jones, and Roderick McKenzie, and published by the Oxford University Press. It is now conventionally referred to as the Liddell-Scott-Jones or LSJ, and sometimes humorously referred to as "the big Liddell" or "the great Scott". A version of this lexicon can be searched online via The Perseus Project.
According to Stuart Jones's preface to the 1925 edition, the creation of the Lexicon was originally proposed by David Alphonso Talboys, an Oxford publisher, and the Lexicon itself was based on the earlier Handwörterbuch der griechischen Sprache by the German lexicographer Franz Passow. (Passow's work, in turn, was based on Johann Gottlob Schneider's Kritisches griechisch-deutsches Handwörterbuch.) The Lexicon was apparently published by the Clarendon Press at Oxford rather than by Talboys because he retired from the publishing business before the first edition was complete.
The seventh edition of the LSJ was abbreviated into An Intermediate Greek-English Lexicon, which is most commonly used in classroom settings; this is humorously referred to as "the middle Liddell". There is also the even shorter A Lexicon: Abridged from Liddell and Scott's Greek-English Lexicon, which is sometimes called "the little Liddell".
The first editor of the LSJ, Henry George Liddell, was Dean of Christ Church, Oxford, and the father of Alice Liddell, the eponymous Alice of the writings of Lewis Carroll.
The LSJ is sometimes compared and contrasted with A Latin Dictionary by Lewis and Short, which was also published by Oxford University Press. For comparisons between the two works, see the article on Lewis and Short's dictionary.
The Supplement
After the publication of the ninth edition in 1940, shortly after the deaths of both Stuart Jones and McKenzie, the OUP maintained a list of addenda et corrigenda (additions and corrections), which was bound with subsequent printings. However, in 1968, these were replaced by a Supplement to the LSJ. Neither the addenda nor the Supplement has ever been merged into the main text, which still stands as originally composed by Liddell, Scott, Jones, and McKenzie. The Supplement was initially edited by M. L. West. Since 1981, it has been edited by P. G. W. Glare, editor of the Oxford Latin Dictionary (not to be confused with Lewis and Short). Since 1988, it has been edited by Glare and Anne A. Thompson. As the title page of the Lexicon makes clear (and the prefaces to the main text and to the Supplement attest), this editorial work has been performed "with the cooperation of many scholars".
The Supplement primarily takes the form of a list of additions and corrections to the main text, sorted by entry. The supplemental entries are marked with signs to show the nature of the changes they call for. Thus, a user of the Lexicon can consult the Supplement after consulting the main text to see whether scholarship after Jones and McKenzie has provided any new information about a particular word. As of 2005, the most recent revision of the Supplement, published in 1996, contains 320 pages of corrections to the main text, as well as other materials.
Here is a typical entry from the revised Supplement:
- x Template:Polytonic to be changed into a cow, S.fr. 269a.37 R.
The small "x" indicates that this word did not appear in the main text at all; "S.fr." refers to the collected fragmentary works of Sophocles.
One interesting new source of lexicographic material in the revised Supplement is the Mycenean inscriptions. The 1996 revised Supplement's Preface notes:
- At the time of the publication of the first Supplement it was felt that the Ventris decipherment of the Linear B tablets was still too uncertain to warrant the inclusion of these texts in a standard dictionary. Ventris's interpretation is now generally accepted and the tablets can no longer be ignored in a comprehensive Greek dictionary [...].