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30-day Challenge! - Day 25: Reading gear! Do you use a dictionary when reading?
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...ever!?? Wow :)"
lol, yup never a dictionary - I might occasionally use google for reference - like I just looked up the dog-breed 'weimaraner' since it was mentioned in the book I'm currenty reading and I wanted to know what it looked like. I don't consider this as using a dictionary, as I consider the need for a dictionary to be about not understanding the word. I rarely come across a word I don't understand, and even if I do, I find that reading on will help me get a fairly good idea of the meaning - I find having to stop and look something up disruptive to my reading


But I look up words all the time on my Kindle cause all that takes is a tap of your finger.
Now that I've gotten used to having that info at my fingertips (literally), it's so frustrating when a definition is inadequate. I bought a collegiate dictionary to replace the default Kindle dictionary cause too many words were missing or poorly defined. But even with the better dictionary it can still get frustrating. I had "Nonconformist" show up multiple times in a book yesterday. I looked it up and found that it is someone that doesn't conform to the Church of England... Well, duh. I'd figured that out! I just wanted to know if that meant atheist, agnostic or if it were just a generic words for other denominations. I ended up having to use my cell phone after all and look it up on Wikipedia.
(Granted, if I was in wi-fi range it would have been just one extra tap to load up Wikipedia, but I was out in the park and no open networks nearby.)
If I ever find a word I don't know the meaning of, I look it up. Depending on where I am, I either use the Internet or my Webster's Dictionary.


Sometimes I do check words that I know have something to do with old tools or something, something we no longer use in our daily lives.


Sometimes I find myself with my finger on a difficult word waiting for its meaning to pop-up, only to realise that it's on actual paper!

I also love to google and wiki ... it feels good to know new things...






To this day, I am in the habit of noting unfamiliar words, usually with a penciled “X” in the margin, so I can come back later to look it up. If it’s a borrowed book, I’ll stick a post-it note on the inside back cover so I can jot down words or interesting locations. A friend with whom I sometimes swap books (and who was in my tenth grade English class) gets a kick out of it.


I never use a physical dictionary any more, because i often read really old stuff the words i don't understand are usually too obscure for a dictionary anyway ;) .

For me, almost-never, pre-computers. And then barely-ever, pre-kindle. But, when reading on kindle, it's just so easy, you point, and up pops a definition :p.
So, I'd say that I use a dictionary much more often now, and find I miss it when reading in a treebook. But, now, even sometimes when reading a treebook, I'll grab my kindle fire and pop onto google to look up a word. So, more often then if I'd have to fetch a physical dictionary, but less often than if I was reading on the kindle.
Who wants to play!