An ingenious word finder that helps you locate the precise word you want when you know generally what you mean but can't recall the exact term. You look up the meaning to find the word. Contains over 400,000 words in more than 70,000 main entries.
The Reader's Digest Association, Inc. is a global media and direct marketing company based in Chappaqua, New York, best known for its flagship publication founded in 1922, Reader's Digest. The company's headquarters are in New York City, where it moved from Pleasantville, New York.
The company was founded by DeWitt and Lila Wallace in 1922 with the first publication of Reader's Digest magazine, but has grown to include a diverse range of magazines, books, music, DVDs and online content.
This is a really neat dictionary, perfect for writers who always have the word they want on the tip of their tongue but don't exactly remember what it is. For example, if you look up something generic, like "window," the entry will consist of a listing of different types of windows, from bay to jalousie to sash. It tells you the name of the panels of glass and the frames separating them. It gives you pictures of different types of windows and exterior housings.
In short, it will help take your prose from generic to specific and help you increase your vocabulary and knowledge along the way. Littered with pictures and tables on all sorts of items, it should be on every writer's shelf.
When you are thinking of a thing, but the word for that thing is just beyond your reach, this book is invaluable. I have used this book for years to jog my memory of words and terms forgotten, or to learn new words that are in a family of words yet not synonyms. A treasure and incredible reference tool for writers!
One of the neatest dictionaries I've ever seen. Want to know the name of a fabric, parts of a saddle, the kinds of pasta, all the kinds of knots? And on and on. It's the one book I'll never loan out because I refer to it continually to find the perfect word, or a description.
Indispensable book for a writer. Want to know those pesky parts of a church? Or what all those sails on a three-master are named? Look up church and ship, get the answers. Great help for anyone who writes.