Fisher may have published one or more works when she was younger, as the title page of her first known work,
A New Grammar, states that it is "By the author of The child's Christian education, and others." ''The child's Christian education
is attributed to a Daniel Fisher, which may have been a pseudonym used by Ann Fisher. What is'' known is that although when Fisher began publishing she did so anonymously, by 1754 she was signing her works "A. Fisher" and she maintained that practice for the rest of her professional career.
A Practical New Grammar (1750) The earliest example extant of
A New Grammar: Being the Most Easy Guide to Speaking and Writing the English Language Properly and Correctly is a copy of the second, 1750 edition, published in Newcastle. This was followed by at least thirty other editions by 1800, and the text continued to be published into the nineteenth century. It was entitled
A Practical New Grammar... from 1759 onwards. Her work was often plagiarized and borrowed outright by subsequent authors. Among those it influenced by Fisher's innovations were the language reformers
Thomas Sheridan and
Thomas Spence.
An Accurate New Spelling Dictionary, and Expositor of the English Language (1773) Fisher was the first woman to produce a dictionary of English, but the path was not easy. She prepared to add a student's dictionary to her catalogue of school books in 1771 with the publication of
An Accurate New Spelling Dictionary, and Expositor of the English Language, but the Dilly Brothers, publishers of
John Entick's
New Spelling Dictionary, entered a lawsuit for piracy against her London publisher, G. Robinson, in what one commentator has described as "a commercial manoeuvre." In 1773, she reissued the first edition as, according to the title page, the
second edition of that work. Copies of the edition of 1773, the 3rd edition of 1777, and a 6th edition in 1788 are still extant. Alston notes a 4th edition in 1781, but copies of this edition, like the original, withdrawn first edition, may be lost forever. ==Works==