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Oz prof prompts Oxford Dictionary to correct 99-yr-old mistake

An Australian physics professor has prompted the Oxford Dictionary to correct a 99-year-old mistake after he discovered that the definition of 'siphon' was wrongly stated since 1911.

Updated on: May 11, 2010, 13:48:09 IST
PTI | By , Melbourne
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An Australian physics professor has prompted the Oxford Dictionary to correct a 99-year-old mistake after he discovered that the definition of 'siphon' was wrongly stated since 1911.

HT Image
HT Image

Stephen Hughes, a lecturer at Queensland University of Technology, discovered the misspelled word while he was writing a paper on how they work.

According to the Herald Sun, the Oxford English Dictionary had incorrectly stated atmospheric pressure is the force in a siphone when it is actually gravity. Siphons are commonly used to empty containers like petrol tanks.

"An extensive check of online and offline dictionaries did not reveal a single dictionary that correctly referred to gravity being the operative force," Hughes said, adding, "My initial reaction was shock. I just stood there like a stunned mullet thinking how can this be?"

He emailed the editors at Oxford whose revision team said they would correct the mistake.

Oxford Dictionary spokeswoman Margot Charlton said "editors who were not scientists" wrote the definition in 1911.

"Our files suggest that no one has queried the definition (since 1911)," Charlton said.

She said editors would take Hughes's notes into account when the entry is rewritten.

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