You are here: Home » OED News » Newsletter archive » December 2000 newsletter » Appeals
Search the site | Contact us
 
December 2000 newsletter

Appeals

Words or phrases which appear on the Appeals List are those currently being drafted or revised for the Oxford English Dictionary for which the documentary evidence is incomplete. Often these are slang or colloquial items which cannot be researched in specialist texts and are most likely to be turned up by a general reader in popular or non-specialized literature.

Usually the appeal is for an earlier example than our current earliest (e.g. 'antedate 1970' for a word for which our earliest example comes from 1970), but sometimes the appeal is for an interdating where there is a large gap in the OED's quotation evidence (e.g. 'interdate 1589-1910'). Occasionally we ask for a postdating (e.g. 'postdate 1875'), if an editor feels that an item being revised is still current but has failed to find any recent examples through the usual avenues of research.

If you can help with any of these appeals, please send information to oed3@oup.co.uk.

my bad int. (my fault):
antedate 1987
bitch-slap n. or v.:
antedate 1991
miaow n. (cry of a cat):
antedate 1840
miaow v. (of a cat: to cry):
antedate 1963
the mind boggles:
antedate 1942
mind-boggling:
antedate 1964
great minds think alike:
antedate 1873
mine n. (my place, house):
antedate 1997
minted a. (rich):
antedate 1995
minus v. (to subtract):
antedate 1984
mississippi-table:
postdate 1801