Also: “a ruler in an oligarchy” isn’t exactly a helpful definition. “Hmm, yes. This floor is made out of floor.”
Actually, dictionaries do this all the damn time. They always use the business end of a word in the definition of said word, without actually explaining what it means.
Often times dictionaries doesnt define every word. Instead they use recursive definitions. So since they mention, oligarchy, Id look that up in the next step.
I guess, the number of descriptions they would have to write would explode exponentially, if they didn’t do that.
But yeah, really annoys me, too. When I write a definition I avoid similar words, even if I assume everyone knows that word, because it provides more information and is clearer when I use a synonym instead.
And dictionaries, whose only job is to provide definitions, frequently settle for these shitty definitions.
Also: “a ruler in an oligarchy” isn’t exactly a helpful definition. “Hmm, yes. This floor is made out of floor.”
Actually, dictionaries do this all the damn time. They always use the business end of a word in the definition of said word, without actually explaining what it means.
Often times dictionaries doesnt define every word. Instead they use recursive definitions. So since they mention, oligarchy, Id look that up in the next step.
I guess, the number of descriptions they would have to write would explode exponentially, if they didn’t do that.
But yeah, really annoys me, too. When I write a definition I avoid similar words, even if I assume everyone knows that word, because it provides more information and is clearer when I use a synonym instead.
And dictionaries, whose only job is to provide definitions, frequently settle for these shitty definitions.
Like, why not just say “ruler in an oligarchy” and then in the next sentence, actually explain what an oligarchy is?
If I’m searching up oligarch, I’m probably not confused on the suffixes, I don’t know what the first part of the word means.
Oligarch: A ruler in an oligarchy
Oligarchy: Rule by oligarchs