These examples come from Cambridge English corpus and web resources. In the example there is nothing to express the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary Editor or Cambridge University Press or its licensor.
In 1598, John Florio published a dictionary of Italian and English. This is the first English dictionary giving meaning to words using quotations ("Illustrations"); so far, these dictionaries do not have actual word definitions. This was greatly changed with the alphabet of the table of principal, Robert Cawdrey, announced in 1604. It contains only 2,449 words, and there are no words beginning with W, X or Y, but this is the first English dictionary.
The earliest English dictionary is the definition of French, Spanish or Latin vocabulary and English. The term "dictionary" was invented in the UK in 1220 and was cast by Mr. Garland's John John - he wrote a book to support the Latin Dictionarius "wording". In 1582, an elementary list of 8,000 English words was created by elementary Richard Mulcaster. The first pure English alphabet dictionary is A Table Alphabeticall written in 1604 by British teacher Robert Cawdrey. The only surviving copy is Bodlean's Oxford Library. This dictionary and many imitators following it were untrusted and considered to be undecided
In Oxford English Dictionary (http://www.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/english/criticism), as with most other dictionaries, criticism first expresses disapproval based on errors or errors perceived We will analyze determine the pros and cons of art and literature. I also wrote about time and place that other people do not want to do. why? I have to put food on my desk for my family. From the beginning of my career, I was a rock critic when I made a stock report as a financial journalist and attended the company's annual shareholders meeting. why? Because I jumped in to see a niche market in the market and fill it. Who says you can not have a good time while you do the work?