"In places like India and South Korea and in our biggest markets in China and Taiwan, a dictionary is seen as a good investment because language is seen to get a good job, to go study abroad etc. So people are ready to purchase and invest in them," says Alison Waters, Publisher, ELT dictionaries and reference grammar, Oxford University Press, UK.
Alison was in India for a multicity workshop on the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary for teachers in Delhi, Chennai, Mumbai and Kolkata.
In the digital era, mobile phones applications, tablets and handheld devices allow people to search online for words and their correct usages, but the print dictionary has still a long way to go before becoming obsolete.
"Even though our online dictionaries are able to offer more, such as quality sound recordings, at the moment what we sell more is the print dictionary. Print is our main focus," says Alison.
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"Just because English is now such a global language with so many speakers around the world and a language of communication, politics and business, that in the foreseeable future it is not going to be affected," says Alison.
With English changing and evolving, new words like "selfie" (the 2013 word of the year) and 'twerk' are added to dictionary following intense research with sophisticated software tools, which trawl the Internet to track and identify new words.
"The selfie was first spotted in 2002 and used once in Australia when a drunk person posted a picture of himself after he hurt his face. We got several more cases on Flicker in 2004 but it was not enough to register on our radar. In 2012 it really took off because several celebrities used it.