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Thursday, April 11, 2013

Noah Webster: Father of the Dictionary

This story of the farm boy who worked his way through Yale and lived through one of the most exciting periods of American history to write the first American dicitonary is in its own way as thrilling as that of any frontiersman hero.
A Connecticut Yankee whose relatives were among the earliest settlers, the author of Webster's Spelling Book and the first American Dictionary was passionately patriotic. But where others gave the new country laws and government, he provided schoolbooks glowing with the American spirit. Twenty-five million copies of Webster's Spelling Book went out to the little red schoolhouses throughout the land during his lifetime.
The American Dictionary, which he sat down to write when he was fifty, was, of course Webster's greatest achievement. This book took more than twenty years to write. It was completely American in spelling and pronunciation, and gave first recognition to homespun words like whittle and tackle, shaver and chore.
Aside from his crowning achievement, Webster was an advanced thinker on all the questions and issues of his day and was practically as many-sided as Benjamin Franklin.
His influence has been unique and enormous and young people will find his life absorbing reading.
 
A very informational book about the life of Noah Webster the father of our modern day dictionary.  I would recommend this book to those who enjoy an informational book on famous people in our history.
 I was not made to write a good review but to express my honest opinion. I recieved this book for review from the publishier for free.

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