The original project to digitise all 22 volumes of the SND and DOST to create the first online
Dictionary of the Scots Language (DSL1) ran from February 2001 to January 2004. It was based at the
University of Dundee and was primarily funded by a grant from the
Arts and Humanities Research Board, with additional support provided by the
Scottish National Dictionary Association and the
Russell Trust. The DSL1 team was led by academic, Dr Victor Skretkowicz and lexicographer, Susan Rennie, a former Senior Editor with the
Scottish National Dictionary Association. The methodology of DSL1 was based on a previous, pilot project by Rennie to digitise the
Scottish National Dictionary, in which page scans of the print SND were converted to machine-readable text using
Optical Character Recognition (OCR) technology. Mark-up was then added using a customised XML format based on
Text Encoding Initiative guidelines. As well as the editorial team in Dundee, the project was assisted by the Centre for Data Digitisation and Analysis at Queen’s University, Belfast, and the Language Technology Group at the University of Edinburgh. The Dundee-born poet, Jim Stewart, also worked for a time as a proofreader on the DSL1 project. After the launch of DSL1 in 2004, the original editorial team in Dundee was disbanded, although work continued separately to update the content of the source dictionaries by Scottish Language Dictionaries (SLD). SLD later partnered with the University of Glasgow, who currently host the DSL, and a number of subsequent versions of DSL have been published, providing additional search facilities and updates to the user interface. The
Dictionary of the Scots Language data was also used to create sample categories for a new
Historical Thesaurus of Scots (HTS) project, led by Rennie at the University of Glasgow, which was launched in 2015. Dr Victor Skretkowicz was born in
Hamilton, Ontario in 1942 and in 1978 he joined the English Department in the
University of Dundee. In 1989, he became the University's representative on the Joint Council for the
Dictionary of the Older Scottish Tongue, being elected as its convenor three years later. Under his direction it was responsible for volumes 9–12 of that dictionary. In 2001, he was appointed Research Director of the project to create the
Dictionary of the Scots Language. Skretkowicz retired from Dundee in 2007 and died in 2009. Archives relating to his work are held by the University of Dundee's Archive Services. ==Nomenclature==