Pages that link to "Item:Q14295"
From LexBib
The following pages link to historical dictionary (Q14295):
Displayed 20 items.
- Enabling Selective Queries and Adapting Data Display in the Electronic Version of a Historical Dictionary (Q4165) (← links)
- The wdlpOst Toolset for Creating Historical Loanword Dictionaries (Q4210) (← links)
- Harvesting from One's Own Field: A Study in Collocational Resonance (Q4279) (← links)
- Quo Vadis Lexicography at the Institute for Dutch Lexicology? (Q4367) (← links)
- A Morphological Historical Root Dictionary for Portuguese (Q4423) (← links)
- Digital and Traditional Resources for the Second Edition of the Deutsches Wörterbuch (Q4470) (← links)
- Onomastic Lexicography (Q4476) (← links)
- Pilot Project: A Dictionary of the Dutch Dialects (Q4490) (← links)
- United in Diversity: Dutch Historical Dictionaries Online (Q4538) (← links)
- Twenty-Five Years of Dictionary Research: Taking Stock of Conferences and Other Lexicographic Events Since Lexeter '83 (Q4562) (← links)
- Mit einem Klick zu vielen Möglichkeiten: www.deutsches-rechtswoerterbuch.de (Q4604) (← links)
- The Negation Particle ne in the Historical Dictionaries of Dutch (Q4687) (← links)
- Lexicography and Endangered Languages: What Can Europe Learn from the Rest of the World? (Q4698) (← links)
- Scottish Lexicography: Major Resources in Minority Languages (Q4706) (← links)
- Electronic Dictionary and Dictionary Writing System: how this duo works for dictionary user’s needs (ABBYY Lingvo and ABBYY Lingvo Content case) (Q4711) (← links)
- Better Nicely Linked than Poorly Copied. Historical and Regional Dictionaries of Dutch Digitally United (Q4718) (← links)
- Wurdboek Fan De Fryske Taal/Dictionary of the Frisian Language Online: New Possibilities, New Opportunities (Q4723) (← links)
- Italian Historical Dictionaries: From the Accademia Della Crusca to the Web (Q4741) (← links)
- Creating a DTD template for Greek dialectal lexicography: the case of the Historical Dictionary of the Cappadocian dialect (Q4806) (← links)
- Why do large historical dictionaries give so much pleasure to their owners and users? (Q4910) (← links)