ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 3月23日 08時31分


Over the past few years, @merriamwebster, the oldest #dictionary publisher in America, has turned itself into a social media powerhouse. Its editors star in online videos on hot-button topics like the serial comma, gender pronouns and the dreaded “irregardless.” Its Twitter feed has become a viral sensation. But the company’s still a bricks-and-mortar operation, still based in Springfield, Massachusetts, where the Merriam brothers bought the rights to Noah Webster’s dictionary in the 1840s and carried on his idea of a distinctly American language. This month, Kory Stamper — a lexicographer who is part of the vanguard of word-nerd celebrities — took @ニューヨーク・タイムズ on a tour of some of the distinctly analog oddities in the building’s basement, including a hallway that seemed to double as a museum of superannuated filing cabinet technology. @itsmetonyluong photographed some of those filing cabinets, as well as a first edition of Noah Webster’s A Compendious Dictionary of the English Language, from 1806, and more. Swipe left to see the photos, or visit the link in our profile to get the full tour.


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