Best of
Dictionaries
2015
The Oxford Dictionary of Literary Terms
Chris Baldick - 2015
It is an essential reference tool for students of literature in any language. Now expanded and in its fourth edition, it includes increased coverage of new terms from modern critical and theoretical movements, such as feminism, schools of American poetry, Spanish verse forms, life writing, and crime fiction. It includes extensive coverage of traditional drama, versification, rhetoric, and literary history, as well as updated and extended advice on recommended further reading and a pronunciation guide to more than 200 terms. Completely revised and updated, this edition also features brand-new entries on terms such as distant reading, graphic novels, middle generation, and misery memoir. Many new bibliographies have been added to entries and recommended web links are available via a companion website.
Essential Urdu Dictionary (Learn Urdu)
Timsal Masud - 2015
Whether you're a school or university student or studying for work or pleasure this is the ultimate Urdu reference dictionary.This dictionary is aimed at speakers of English who want to learn Urdu.- Two-way dictionary: Urdu-English, English- Urdu including transliteration throughout.- 4000 headwords.- Contains handy sections teaching Urdu script and grammar.- Insights from the author give extra help and guidance on usage.- Covers everyday idioms and expressions.- Includes new terms related to media and internet Urdu.Written by a university professor with years of teaching experience this dictionary will help support your studies.
A Doctor's Dictionary: Writings on Culture and Medicine
Iain Bamforth - 2015
Bamforth brings his wide experience of medicine around the world, from the high-tech American Hospital of Paris to the community health centers of Papua, together with his engaging interest in the stranger manifestations of medical matters in relation to art, literature, and culture—such as the mysterious “Stendhal’s syndrome,” which caused 106 tourists in Florence to be hospitalized due to an overload of sublime Renaissance art.