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María Moliner
Spanish lexicographer

María Moliner

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Spanish lexicographer
From
Gender
Female
Place of birth
Paniza, Zaragoza Province, Aragon, Spain
Place of death
Madrid, Community of Madrid, Spain
Age
80 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

María Moliner (30 March 1900 – 22 January 1981) was a Spanish librarian and lexicographer. She is perhaps best known for her Diccionario de uso del español, first published in 1966–1967, when she completed the work started in 1952.

Biography

María Juana Moliner Ruiz was the eldest daughter of Enrique Moliner, a doctor and son of a doctor, and Matilde Ruiz. At the age of two, her family moved from Zaragoza to Almazán in the border province of Soria. While a teenager her father left for Argentina and never came back, while Moliner, according to her son Fernando, lived with her mother, sister Matilde and brother Enrique in severe poverty. She pursued her Bachillerato at the Instituto General y Técnico Cardenal Cisneros, and obtained a degree in History in 1921 from the University of Zaragoza.

She married Fernando Ramón Ferrando, a physics graduate, in 1925 and had four children. Years later the couple moved to Valencia.

In 1946, Moliner was put in charge of the library at the Superior Technical School of Industrial Engineers in Madrid, until her retirement in 1970. In the early 1950s, she started work on her Diccionario de uso del español, getting up at about five in the morning, working a little, watering her flowers, going to work, having a small siesta before returning to her dictionary work. Her method was to look up words, read newspapers and note words she had heard in the street.

Diccionario de uso del español

In 1952 his son Fernando brought her a book from Paris that caught her attention, the Learner's Dictionary of Current English by A.S. Hornby (1948). She had noticed the shortcomings of the DRAE (Real Academia Española's dictionary), she was already making notes on terms, so this English book gave her the idea of making a dictionary. By then, she began composing her Diccionario de uso del español which she thought she would have finished within two years but in reality it took more than fifteen years of work at her home. In 1955, at the request of the academic Dámaso Alonso, who followed her work with interest and had connections with the Gredos publishing. Moliner eventually signed a contract with them for the future publication of her dictionary, whose typographic edition was extremely laborious.

The Diccionario de uso del español is much more detailed than the Real Academia Española's dictionary, containing detailed definitions, synonyms, expressions and families of words. Unlike other dictionaries, Ll and Ch, often considered letters in their own right but now less frequently so, are grouped under L and C respectively, as in many recent dictionaries (and as in English). The book was immediately successful and is well regarded today, summed up in Miguel Delibes' quip that "it is a work that justifies a life" ("Es una obra que justifica una vida").

A María Moliner reading campaign is supported by the Ministry of Culture of the Government of Spain. Since 1998, the campaign for the promotion of reading in Spanish towns of less than 50,000 inhabitants has been in the format of a competition aimed at towns meeting these criteria, giving prizes to the best projects or activities for promoting reading among children and young people. It is held under the auspices of the Ministry of Culture and the collaboration of the Spanish Federation of Municipalities and Provinces and, since 1992, with the collaboration of the Coca-Cola España Foundation. 350 libraries are awarded a prize of books made up of 200 children's and young adults' books. Since 2002 the three best projects receive cash prizes as well. The competition is held annually and all settlements with up to 50,000 inhabitants that have a staffed local library may submit their projects.

The first (and the only original edition authorized by her) was published in 1966-67 by the Gredos publishing.

In 1998 a second edition that consisted of two volumes and a CD-ROM, as well as an abridged edition in a volume was published. The third and last revision was published in September 2007 and consists of two volumes.

Relationship with the Real Academia Española

On November 7, 1972, the writer Daniel Sueiro interviewed Maria Moliner in the Heraldo de Aragon. The headline was a question: "Will Maria Moliner the first woman to join the Academy?". Dámaso Alonso, Rafael Lapesa and Pedro Lain Entralgo had recommended her. But the elected would be Emilio Alarcos Llorach.

Moliner said one of her most famous quotes that have been repeated:

Yes, my biography is very short due to my only achievement which is my dictionary. I mean, I do not have any works which can be added to that long list that gives me credit to be admitted at the Academy (...) My work is clearly the dictionary. Of course, the fact that a philosopher - referring to Emilio Alarcos- enters at the Academy and not me, but if that dictionary would have been written by a man, I would say: <<How this man can not be at the Academy!>>

The nomination did not succeed and another female academic, Carmen Conde, occupied the position

Violeta Demonte, Spanish professor at Universidad Autónoma de Madrid remarked about Moliner's dictionary: "Since the theoretical bases and the criterion for analysis are not always clear and the basic principles have intuitive origin, the usefulness of her dictionary is uneven.".

One of her obituaries defined well this injustice: "An academic with no chair".

Moliner received the "Lorenzo Nieto López" prize in 1973, awarded by the Real Academia Española

In 1981, L. Permanyer wrote a hard critique about what he considered the stance of most academics toward Moliner.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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