Helen Hopkinson
Mar 5, 2008
  10815
(0 votes)

Who really is (or was) Merriam Webster?

An increasing number of EPiServer CMS editors write text for the Web in a language other than that native to them. Many Web sites created in countries that do not have English as a first language are localized to include English and other languages. Anyone responsible for the production/translation of text into English will naturally - hopefully - want the English text to have the same quality as the original text.

Working with English texts all day every day at EPiServer, I also often need a bit of language help along the way. OK, I may be a native speaker, being born in the UK, but that doesn't automatically mean that I can spell everything right the first time, especially since I have to spell everything right in American English and not British English.

One tool that I couldn't live without in my day-to-day work as a tech writer is the Merriam-Webster online toolbar. Merriam-Webster Online (http://www.m-w.com) is THE dictionary for American English, but who really is (or was) Merriam Webster? Did he or she ever exist? I was interested to know and came up with the following information after a bit of research.

Noah Webster of Connecticut, USA, published the first truly American dictionary, "A Compendious Dictionary of the English Language" in 1806. After Noah Webster's death in 1843, the Merriam brothers bought the rights to Webster's dictionary. The rest is history and now it's possible to search the dictionary directly from a toolbar in your Web browser. Noah Webster would be amazed if he could see what had happened to his first dictionary.

Download the Merriam-Webster Online Toolbar for Internet Explorer from http://www.merriam-webster.com/downloads/general/toolbar_ie.htm. Afterwards you can easily search the dictionary by entering your search word in the search box and clicking the Dictionary icon. It couldn't be easier!

merriam1

Are you looking to expand your English vocabulary and impress others at work? Subscribe to the Word of the Day and learn a new English word every day at http://www.merriam-webster.com/cgi-bin/mwwod.pl.

Mar 05, 2008

Comments

Andrea Filyo
Andrea Filyo Sep 21, 2010 10:32 AM

Interesting, and great tips thanks!

Sep 21, 2010 10:32 AM

This was truly interesting to know! I wonder if you could tell me what version of IE you have? For how long have you been using it and do you believe it is safe to download? I use WordFinder dictionary, do you have any experience in that tool as well?

Helen Hopkinson
Helen Hopkinson Sep 21, 2010 10:32 AM

Thanks for the tip Per. Finally an eng-swe-eng dictionary that's easier and better than Lexin!

Please login to comment.
Latest blogs
Unlock Experimentation with Content Variations in CMS 13

Part 1 argued that Content Variations is the CMS 13 feature that didn't get the keynote but should have. This is the follow-up: wiring those...

Piotr | Jun 11, 2026

umage.ai is now an Optimizely Silver Solution Partner

umage.ai is officially an Optimizely Silver Solution Partner. The badge formalises an alignment that was already there — agent-driven Optimizely wo...

Allan Thraen | Jun 10, 2026 |

Why Optimizely's MCP Servers Offering Matters

MCP (Model Context Protocol) is what enables, connecting AI agents directly to enterprise tools. With Optimizely OPAL and Optimizely MCP servers,...

K Khan | Jun 9, 2026

A day in the life of an Optimizely OMVP: Managing Graph search: the native portal and the community plugin

Optimizely Graph has quietly become the search engine sitting underneath most new Optimizely builds. It ships with CMS 13, it's the answer to "what...

Graham Carr | Jun 9, 2026

Extending SelectMany for Multi-Column Checkbox Layouts in Optimizely CMS 12

By default, a SelectMany property is rendered as a vertical checkbox list in the CMS editor. While this works well for a small number of options,...

Sanjay Kumar | Jun 9, 2026

Optimizely CMS (SaaS) MCP Basics

What just shipped Optimizely quietly dropped something significant: a hosted Model Context Protocol (MCP) server for CMS (SaaS). This means your...

Kiran Patil | Jun 9, 2026 |