Roget's Thesaurus is a widely used English-language thesaurus, created in 1805 by Peter Mark Roget (1779–1869), British physician, natural theologian and lexicographer.

History

It was released to the public on 29 April 1852. Dr Peter Mark Roget former secretary of the Royal Society was inspired by the Utilitarian teachings of Jeremy Bentham and wished to help "those who are painfully groping their way and struggling with the difficulties of composition this work processes to hold out a helping hand". The Karpeles Library Museum houses the original manuscript in its collection. Each class is composed of multiple divisions and then sections. This may be conceptualized as a tree containing over a thousand branches for individual "meaning clusters" or semantically linked words. Although these words are not strictly synonyms, they can be viewed as colours or connotations of a meaning or as a spectrum of a concept. One of the most general words is chosen to typify the spectrum as its headword, which labels the whole group.

Editions

The original edition had 15,000 words and each successive edition has been larger, with the most recent edition (the eighth) containing 443,000 words. The book is updated regularly and each edition is heralded as a gauge to contemporary terms; but each edition keeps true to the original classifications established by Roget.. By itself, it is not protected in the United States, where use of the name "Roget" in the title of a thesaurus does not necessarily indicate any relationship to Roget directly; it has come to be seen as a generic thesaurus name.

In 1952 the copyright belonging after Roget's death in 1869 to his son "John Lewis" Roget a lawyer then his grandson "Samuel Romilly" Roget a engineer passed to the original publishers, now known as Longman. The first Penguin edition appeared in 1953 and the second designed par Robert A. Dutch in 1966. Susan M. Lloyd née Emmerson, former teacher in Birmingham and in Uganda, Master Philosophy degree at the University of East Anglia, edited the first revision for twenty years of Roget's Thesaurus, published by Longman in 1982. Betty Kirkpatrick resumes the revision of the Thesaurus in 1987.

See also

  • Moby Thesaurus

References

Bibliography

  • Roget's Thesaurus: The Original Manuscript at Karpeles Manuscript Library
  • Searchable 1911 version hosted by the University of Chicago
  • Roget's Thesaurus at Project Gutenberg
  • Roget's Hyperlinked Thesaurus - (No longer maintained)

<!-- thesaurus.com no longer uses Roget's thesaurus, but instead uses a substantially different "Roget's II". Put this link back if/when they go back to the old thesaurus. * Current searchable version at Reference.com -->

  • ROGETS THESAURUS, encyclopedia.com
  • Peter Mark Roget, britannica.com
  • The Remarkable Roget's Thesaurus, merriam-webster.com