John Ash (divine)

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Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use British English John Ash (c. 1724–1779) was an English Baptist minister at Pershore, Worcestershire, and author of an English dictionary and grammar books.

Life

Ash was born in Dorset about 1724. He studied for the ministry at Bristol, under Bernard Foskett, became pastor at Loughwood Meeting House, a Baptist chapel near the village of Dalwood in Dorset, and while there contributed to periodicals. He settled in the ministry at Pershore in 1746, as the result of a compromise between different parties in the congregation.[1]

He obtained a degree of LL.D. from a Scottish university in 1774, and died at Pershore in March or April 1779, aged 55.[1]

Works

Ash is best known as a lexicographer, author of:

Ash's New and Complete Dictionary was noteworthy for the number of obsolete and provincial words contained in it. It incorporated most of Nathan Bailey's collection of canting words. This dictionary was the first to define in English the previously omitted words fuck and cunt.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". His debt to Samuel Johnson was demonstrated in a famous error in his etymology of the word curmudgeon, which he says derives from the French for "unknown correspondent"; Johnson's A Dictionary of the English Language from twenty years before had suggested (erroneously, as it happens) that the word derives from "cœur méchant" (malicious-hearted), attributing his information to an "unknown correspondent".Script error: No such module "Unsubst". Ash's Dictionary is mentioned in Thomas Hardy's novel Far from the Madding Crowd.[2]

An earlier work was:

  • Grammatical Institutes.[3][4] It has been commented that "Ash understood much better than Lowth what it took to write a grammar for children."Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

Other works:

References

  1. This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainScript error: No such module "template wrapper".
  2. Linguistic History notes
  3. Notes about John Ash at Random House's Word of the Day
  4. Reference to Ash's New and Complete Dictionary.
  5. Bibliography of Primary and Secondary Texts pertaining to the Study of English in Eighteenth-Century Great Britain (at Emory.edu)
  6. The codifiers and the English language: tracing the norms of Standard English
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Notes

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  1. a b c Template:Cite DNB
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  3. Grammatical Institutes; or, an Easy Introduction to Dr. Lowth's English Grammar: Designed for the Use of Schools, and to lead Young Gentlemen and Ladies into the Knowledge of the First Principles of the English Language. London, 1760.
  4. Grammatical Institutes; or, An Easy Introduction to Dr. Lowth's Grammar, 1785 ed. (facsimile ed., 1979, Scholars' Facsimiles & Reprints, Template:ISBN).

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Attribution

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