The OED is a comprehensive multi-volume
historical dictionary, whose first edition was published in installments called fascicles between 1884 and 1928. These citations were mostly submitted to the editors by volunteer readers in what current OED editors describe as an early instance of what is now called
crowdsourcing. The first edition of the OED included citations from
Meanderings of Memory for senses of 50 entries:
chapelled,
cock-a-bondy,
couchward,
day,
dike/
dyke,
droop,
dump,
epistle,
extemporize,
fancy,
flambeau,
flesh,
foodless,
fringy,
full,
gigantomachy,
goal,
goalward,
hearthward,
idol,
inscriptionless,
lump,
peaceless,
rape,
re- (prefix),
reliefless,
rheumatize,
sanctuaried,
sap,
sarcophage,
scarf,
scavage,
shoe,
slippery,
sun,
templed,
transplanter,
tribe,
tribunal,
trouse,
trunked,
un- (prefix),
unbusy,
unstuff,
vermined,
vulgar,
warmthless,
wen,
whinge, and
width. In 2010, the third edition of the OED added the word
revirginize, whose earliest citation is the 51st from
Meanderings of Memory. Inspection of the original submission slips in the OED archive in 2013 revealed that they came from
Edward Peacock (1831–1915), an
antiquary, writer, and regular OED volunteer reader living near
Brigg in Lincolnshire. ==OED revision==