Film, Media & TV1 min ago
Dictionary of Phrase and Fable
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I'd like to buy a Dictionary of Phrase and Fable for Christmas, and the two most popular ones seem to be either Brewers or Oxford. Which is the best one?
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Nicola, and a link will take you directly to the website of the "Brewer's Dictionary of P & P". If you make a note of the URL, you can refer to it at any time online free! So, why not make the Oxford the one you actually buy?
Thank you very much for your answers. Good thinkin' Quizmaster! The only thing is that the book is a gift for my Dad, who doesn't use the internet. So, which one do you think I should go for? Also, Ravenhair, do you have an example of the unreliable content of the Brewers book? I'm not being picky, but you've intrigued me a little!
I'd still suggest buying the Oxford, even though I am not familiar with it at all. The reason I say so is because - if your Dad doesn't find the answer he's looking for in it - he can easily phone you (I presume) and you can then refer to the Brewer's website in the hope that the answer's there. Still the best of both worlds, in a sense! Cheers
Well, we use it a lot at work as a reference tool and recently we were looking at French phrases which have passed into the English language (like carte blanche, or whatever). So Brewer's contains quite a lot of French phrases which it claims are modern French and have been borrowed into English. However, on further research, most of these don't actually exist in French at all, or were used by just a handful of people in the 17th century. This, of course, may not be of any concern to your Dad, but I wonder how well the rest of the content is researched.