Etymology, lexicography, and toponymic studies In pure
philology, Skeat's principal achievement was his
An Etymological Dictionary of the English Language (4 parts, 1879–1882; rev., and enlarged, 1910). Skeat was also a pioneer of
toponymy. His major publications in this field include: •
A Concise Dictionary of Middle English (1888), in conjunction with
A. L. Mayhew • "A Glossary of Tudor and Stuart Words" (1914) with A. L. Mayhew •
The place-names of Cambridgeshire (1901) •
Place-names of Huntingdonshire (1902) •
Place-names of Hertfordshire (1904) •
Place-names of Bedfordshire (1906) •
Place-names of Berkshire (1911) •
Place-names of Suffolk (1913)
Editions •
The Holy Gospels in Anglo-Saxon, Northumbrian, and Old Mercian Versions (1871) • Chaucer's
A Treatise on the Astrolabe (1872) •
Piers Plowman in three parallel texts (1886) •
The Complete Works of Geoffrey Chaucer (1894–97) Skeat edited works for the
Early English Text Society: •
Bruce of
John Barbour • ''
Pierce the Ploughman's Crede'' •
Havelok the Dane •
William of Palerne For the
Scottish Text Society: • Skeat edited
The Kingis Quair, • Skeat published an edition (2 vols., 1871) of
Chatterton, with an investigation of the sources of the obsolete words used by Chatterton. • Skeat published an edition of Chaucer in one volume for general readers • Skeat published an edition of Chaucer's
A Treatise on the Astrolabe, with an expert commentary. Skeat produced what is still the main edition of
Ælfric of Eynsham's
Lives of the Saints; the edition includes translations which were largely the work of two women referred to as Mss Gunning and Wilkinson, who were credited in the preface to his edition.
Teaching According to A. J. Wyatt, Skeat "was not a great teacher ... he left the teaching to those who had learned from him" – i.e. Wyatt himself and
Israel Gollancz – "his teaching was episodic. Yet his lectures were eagerly followed by the fit though few; they were always interesting when least utilitarian, when he forgot examinations and syllabuses, and poured forth from the quaint storehouse of his motley memory things new and old." Skeat's pedagogical works include: •
Specimens of English from 1394 to 1597 (1871) •
Specimens of Early English from 1298 to 1393 (1872), in conjunction with
Richard Morris •
Principles of English Etymology (2 series, 1887 and 1891) • ''A Student's Pastime'' (1896), a volume of essays •
The Chaucer Canon (1900) •
A Primer of Classical and English Philology (1905) ==International relations==