20th century Before writing
A Dictionary of Modern English Usage, Henry W. Fowler and his younger brother,
Francis George Fowler (1871–1918), wrote and revised ''
The King's English (1906), a grammar and usage guide. Assisted in the research by Francis, who died in 1918 of tuberculosis contracted (1915–16) whilst serving with the British Expeditionary Force in the First World War (1914–1918), Henry dedicated the first edition of the Dictionary'' to his late brother: The first edition of the dictionary was published in 1926, and then was reprinted with corrections in 1930, 1937, 1954, and in 2009 with an introduction and commentary by the linguist
David Crystal. The second edition, titled ''Fowler's Modern English Usage'', was published in 1965, revised and edited by
Ernest Gowers. Gowers largely preserved the original, citing Randolph Quirk's comment on the first edition: "
Modern English Usage is personal: it is Fowler". The third edition, ''The New Fowler's Modern English Usage'', was published in 1996, edited by
Robert Burchfield. While Fowler had focused only on
British English, Burchfield broadened the dictionary to include
American English and English spoken in
Australia,
Canada,
New Zealand,
South Africa, and elsewhere. The ''Pocket Fowler's Modern English Usage'' (1999), edited by the lexicographer
Robert Allen, is an abridgement of Burchfield's 1996 edition. It was produced by omitting about half the entries and reducing the length of others. A second edition of Allen's
Pocket Fowler was published in 2008, the content of which the publisher said "harks back to the original 1926 edition".
21st century The fourth edition, ''Fowler's Dictionary of Modern English Usage'', was published in 2015, edited by Jeremy Butterfield. This edition saw over 250 new entries added to the dictionary. Butterfield made use of the
Oxford English Corpus to gather data about the frequency of various spellings, differences in usage of similar words (via word associations), relative frequencies of words in different varieties of English, and
malapropisms and misspellings. The
World Wide Web facilitated his access to this and other online resources. On the tension between
descriptivism and
prescriptivism involved in compliling a usage dictionary, Butterfield points out that while "people have taken it for granted that [Fowler] laid down cast-iron rules to be adhered to absolutely. That belief is far from the truth. He was, paradoxically, both descriptive and prescriptive." Butterfield also says, ==See also==