Which English Dictionary is Best for You We Reviewed 9 Popular Online Dictionaries

Hi, I’m Oli.

Welcome to Oxford Online English!

In this video, you’ll see reviews of several
online dictionaries.

Which dictionary is the best for English learners?

Which should – or shouldn’t – you use?

You’ll find out!

In this video, you’ll see the pros and cons
of nine popular online dictionaries.

We tested the following: Cambridge, Longman,
dictionary.com, Collins, Lexico, Macmillan,

wordreference.com, Chambers and Merriam-Webster.

If you want the short version here it is.

Are you an upper-intermediate or advanced
English learner who wants the most complete,

full-featured online dictionary?

Use Longman.

Are you at intermediate level or below?

Use Lexico.

Maybe use Lexico even if you’re at a higher
level.

You want to know why, or how we tested, or
why you perhaps shouldn’t use some of these

other dictionaries?

Keep watching!

We created six tests for each online dictionary,
based around looking up common verbs like

‘talk’, ‘go’, ‘pick’ and so on.

We chose these verbs because they have many
different meanings, as well as many phrasal

verbs and idioms based on them.

In this video, we’ll focus on the verb ‘talk’.

So, what were the six tests?

The first test was for completeness: does
the dictionary give you every definition of

a word?

The second test: does the dictionary give
you definitions of phrasal verbs, collocations

and idioms related to the word you look up?

Test three: does the dictionary explain the
difference between UK and US pronunciation

and usage?

Test four: does the dictionary explain verb
structures and complements?

For example, you can ‘talk to someone’,
‘talk with someone’, ‘talk about something’,

and ‘talk of something’.

Test five: can you look up phrasal verbs and
idioms directly?

With some dictionaries, if you try to look
up a phrasal verb like ‘put down’, it

will redirect you to the root verb, ‘put’.

This makes it harder to find the information
you need.

Good online dictionaries let you look up phrasal
verbs and idioms directly.

Test six: is the information presented in
a clear, organised way, and is the dictionary

website easy to use?

This test is more subjective, of course.

Finally, we looked for any other features
which might be useful for English learners.

Remember: if you want to see the full test
results, check out the page on our website.

If you’re watching on YouTube, you can find
a link in the video description.

So, how did our online dictionaries do?

Cambridge didn’t do very well, which is
a shame, because it had been my go-to online

dictionary before I started making this video.

Firstly, it is not complete.

It doesn’t contain all the possible definitions
of a word.

Plus, it doesn’t have a complete list of
related phrasal verbs, idioms and collocations.

On the other hand, for beginners or intermediate
learners, there are some good example sentences.

The definitions are well-written and clear.

It does also show the UK and US pronunciation
of a word, with audio, so that’s a positive.

It doesn’t clearly show verb complements
and structures.

Overall, I can’t recommend it.

One of the biggest problems is that three
different dictionaries are combined on one

page; there’s a British English dictionary,
an American dictionary, and a business English

dictionary.

This makes it confusing to use, because different
information is in different places, and not

always where you might expect it.

I won’t spend more time on it, because there
are much better dictionaries you can use.

Longman was number one in our tests.

It’s by far the most complete dictionary
I found.

It contained all the information you might
need: every definition of the word, possible

verb complements, phrasal verbs, idioms…

Everything you might need is there.

Not only that, but they have example sentences
and many example sentences have audio, at

least for some words.

That makes it a great resource for practising
pronunciation.

At the bottom of the page, they also have
a large number of examples taken from natural

English texts.

You can look up phrasal verbs and other word
combinations directly.

Even the longer phrase ‘know what you’re
talking about’ has its own entry, with dedicated

examples.

That’s impressive!

When you’re learning English, you’ll often
hear that you need to learn language in chunks.

This is good advice, so it’s great that
there are dictionaries which can help you

to do this.

There’s one minor criticism: it gives you
the UK and US pronunciations of a word, but

it doesn’t clearly show which is which.

For reference, the UK pronunciation is given
first, and the US pronunciation second.

Longman also has a number of useful features
for English learners.

If you look up a verb, you can find a verb
tense table which lists all the forms and

tenses.

Finally, it has a good thesaurus, which gives
you alternative words and also explains what

they mean, and how they’re different from
the base word.

Generally, I found Longman one of the easiest
dictionaries to use.

Information is organised and presented nicely,
and the page is relatively clean, without

unnecessary clutter.

Dictionary dot com isn’t really a dictionary
in its own right.

Instead, it collects information from many
dictionaries.

In summary, I don’t recommend it for English
learners.

It’s reasonably complete, although you won’t
find much information on idioms and collocations.

More importantly, the information is not well-organised.

A lot of info is hidden behind ‘see more’
links, but there doesn’t seem to be any

logic to what’s hidden and what’s displayed
immediately.

Plus, because it collects information from
different dictionaries on a single page, the

information is divided into different sections,
but not in a logical way.

This makes it harder to find what you need.

It doesn’t do a good job of showing related
phrasal verbs, idioms and collocations.

You also can’t look up phrasal verbs directly,
which is a big disadvantage.

Collins has some positive features.

It scored four out of five for completeness.

It has clear explanations with examples for
each definition.

However, a couple of things could be better.

Our test word – ‘talk’ – can be both
a noun and a verb.

Most dictionaries will separate the verb and
noun definitions, which makes sense.

Collins mixes them together in a list.

It’s not bad, but it seems strange, and
I think it could be confusing for some users.

Also, it gives some information about complements
and structures, but it’s not so clear.

They highlight the structures used in their
example sentences, but there’s no dedicated

information on what structures are possible
and what they mean.

Finally, like some other dictionaries in our
list, Collins tries to combine results from

different dictionaries on one page.

I think this is terrible design, because you
might not even realise there are more parts

to the page.

You see the definitions and explanations,
you get down to here, and… that looks like

the end, right?

But, then there’s more: a British dictionary,
an American dictionary, and more examples

and idioms.

Overall, not bad, but it’s not the best.

Lexico is one of the best dictionaries we
tested.

I highly recommend it, especially for learners
at an intermediate or lower level.

Even if you’re a higher-level learner, give
Lexico a try.

Why?

Because it’s so clear and well-organised.

For example, it gives you one example sentence
for each definition, but you can also click

to see more if you want.

That’s a really nice feature.

You just need a simple example?

You can have it.

You want more?

You can have that, too.

In general, Lexico does the best job of presenting
a large amount of information in a logical

way.

However, it’s also fully complete.

Only two dictionaries scored 100% in our completeness
tests: Longman and Lexico.

Plus, information on phrasal verbs, collocations
and idioms is nicely separated, and you can

look up longer phrases directly; for example,
if you look up an idiom like ‘talk the talk’

directly, you’ll find a dedicated page.

The only negative is that it doesn’t explain
the difference between UK and US pronunciation

or usage.

Overall, I also found Lexico to be the cleanest
dictionary in terms of design.

It’s a great choice for English learners.

Macmillan is slightly different, because it
puts different parts of speech on different

pages.

So, if you look up ‘talk’, you’ll see
definitions for the verb only.

The noun definitions are on a separate page,
which might not be easy to find if you’re

using a mobile or a smaller screen, because
they’re hidden in this ‘other entries’

box.

I don’t think that’s a good point.

Macmillan has some positives: it has good
information on verb complements, which is

also nicely presented, and you can look up
phrasal verbs and idioms directly.

However, it’s not complete, and it doesn’t
give any information on UK versus US pronunciation

or usage.

So, it’s in the middle.

There are better options.

I knew about Wordreference as a bilingual
dictionary.

They have many bilingual versions, aimed at
speakers or learners of European languages.

However, they also include a monolingual English
dictionary.

Is it any good?

It has some advantages, but overall,
not recommended.

Like dictionary dot com, Wordreference collects
information from multiple dictionaries, but

this means you have too much information on
one page, some of which is repeated, and it’s

hard to find what you need.

You also can’t look up phrasal verbs or
idioms directly.

If you try to look up a phrasal verb like
‘pick up’, you’ll be redirected to the

root verb – ‘pick’.

Then, you’ll have to find the definition
on the page.

Wordreference does have one excellent and
– at least in our tests – unique feature.

For pronunciation, it has audio not just for
UK and US English, but also for other regions,

such as Ireland or Jamaica.

It also includes some regional UK and US accents.

This is really useful, because actually there
isn’t just one UK pronunciation and one

US pronunciation of a word.

There are many English accents, in the UK,
US and in other English-speaking countries,

and it’s good to understand how pronunciation
is different in different parts of the world.

So, maybe use Wordreference for the pronunciation
audio, but I don’t recommend it as a dictionary.

I’ll keep this short: don’t use Chambers.

Two points: first, they print information
in a big block, like you’d find in a paper

dictionary.

That makes sense on paper, because you need
to save money and space.

On the web, there’s no reason to do this,
and it makes it harder to find what you’re

looking for.

Secondly, Chambers doesn’t seem to be aimed
at learners of English as a second language.

It doesn’t give many examples, nor does
it give information about verb complements,

phrasal verbs, and so on.

You can’t look up phrasal verbs or other
longer chunks directly.

It’s not terrible; it does the basic job
of a dictionary, but I can’t see any reason

to use it.

Merriam-Webster also doesn’t have much to
recommend it.

One major disadvantage: it doesn’t give
complete lists of phrasal verbs, idioms or

collocations when you look up a word.

For ‘talk’, it includes four phrases here, but why these
four?

Why not others?

This seems strange; if you’re going to include
some phrasal verbs or idioms, you should include

all of them.

There’s no information on UK versus US pronunciation
or usage.

There’s also no information on verb complements.

They give examples, but the examples aren’t
full sentences, making them less useful.

Finally, the design is weird.

There are all these colons and slashes in
odd places.

Maybe that doesn’t bother you, but I found
it unnecessary and a little confusing.

On the other hand, you can look up phrasal
verbs and idioms directly.

Also, it has real-life examples which are
pulled from the internet, although they aren’t

always accurately classified.

For example, some of the examples for ‘talk’
as a verb are actually the noun form.

Having reviewed these dictionaries, I’ve
switched my go-to online dictionary from Cambridge

to Longman and Lexico.

Honestly, I was surprised at how badly Cambridge
came out of these tests.

Although I think Longman is the best, I would
actually recommend Lexico for most purposes.

It gives you complete information, and it’s
so easy to use.

What about you?

Which dictionary do you use?

Are you planning to switch to a new one?

Do you have anything to add to our reviews?

Let us know in the comments!

Thanks for watching!

你好,我是奥利。

欢迎来到牛津在线英语!

在本视频中,您将看到几部
在线词典的评论。

哪本词典最适合英语学习者?

哪个应该——或者不应该——你使用?

你会发现!

在本视频中,您将看到
九种流行在线词典的优缺点。

我们测试了以下产品:Cambridge、Longman、
dictionary.com、Collins、Lexico、Macmillan、

wordreference.com、Chambers 和 Merriam-Webster。

如果你想要这里的简短版本。

您是
想要最完整、

功能最齐全的在线词典的中高级或高级英语学习者吗?

使用朗文。

你是中级还是以下?

使用词典。

即使您处于更高级别,也可以使用 Lexico

你想知道为什么,或者我们是如何测试的,
或者你为什么不应该使用这些

其他字典?

一直在看!

我们为每个在线词典创建了六个测试,
基于查找常见的动词,如

“talk”、“go”、“pick”等。

我们之所以选择这些动词,是因为它们有许多
不同的含义,以及许多

基于它们的短语动词和成语。

在本视频中,我们将重点关注动词“谈话”。

那么,这六项测试是什么?

第一个测试是为了完整性
:字典是否为您提供

了单词的所有定义?

第二个测试:词典是否给你提供了与

你查到的单词相关的动词短语、搭配和成语的定义?

测试三:词典有解释
英美发音

和用法的区别吗?

测试四:词典有解释动词
结构和补语吗?

例如,您可以“与某人交谈”、
“与某人交谈”、“谈论某事”

和“谈论某事”。

测试五:你能直接查短语动词和
成语吗?

在某些词典中,如果您尝试
查找短语动词,例如“put down”,它

会将您重定向到词根动词“put”。

这使您更难找到所需的信息

好的在线词典可以让您直接查找短语
动词和成语。

测试六:信息呈现是否
清晰、有条理,词典

网站是否易于使用?

当然,这个测试更主观。

最后,我们寻找
可能对英语学习者有用的任何其他功能。

请记住:如果您想查看完整的测试
结果,请查看我们网站上的页面。

如果您在 YouTube 上观看,可以
在视频说明中找到链接。

那么,我们的在线词典是怎么做的呢?

剑桥的表现不是很好,这
很遗憾,因为在我开始制作这个视频之前,它一直是我的首选在线

词典。

首先,它不完整。

它不
包含单词的所有可能定义。

另外,它没有
相关短语动词、成语和搭配的完整列表。

另一方面,对于初学者或中级
学习者,有一些很好的例句。

定义写得很好,很清楚。

它还显示了一个单词的英国和美国发音
,带有音频,所以这是一个积极的方面。

它没有清楚地显示动词补语
和结构。

总的来说,我不能推荐它。

最大的问题之一是
在一页上合并了三个不同的字典

; 有英国英语词典
、美国词典和商务英语

词典。

这使得使用起来很混乱,因为不同的
信息在不同的地方,并不

总是在你期望的地方。

我不会花更多时间在上面,因为
您可以使用更好的词典。

朗文在我们的测试中排名第一。

这是迄今为止我找到的最完整的字典

它包含您可能
需要的所有信息:单词的每个定义、可能的

动词补语、短语动词、习语……

您可能需要的一切都在那里。

不仅如此,它们还有例句,
而且许多例句都有音频,

至少对于某些单词来说是这样。

这使它成为练习发音的绝佳资源

在页面底部,他们
还有大量取自自然

英文文本的示例。

您可以直接查找短语动词和其他单词
组合。

即使是更长的短语“知道你在
说什么”也有自己的条目,并附有专门的

例子。

这很让人佩服!

在学习英语时,您经常会
听到需要分块学习语言。

这是一个很好的建议,所以
有字典可以帮助你

做到这一点真是太好了。

有一个小批评:它给你
一个单词的英国和美国发音,但

它并没有清楚地表明哪个是哪个。

作为参考,首先给出英国发音
,然后给出美国发音。

Longman 还为英语学习者提供了许多有用的功能

如果你查找一个动词,你可以找到一个动词
时态表,其中列出了所有的形式和

时态。

最后,它有一个很好的词库,可以为
您提供替代词,并解释

它们的含义,以及它们
与基本词的不同之处。

一般来说,我发现朗文词典是最
容易使用的词典之一。

信息组织和呈现得很好
,页面相对干净,没有

不必要的混乱。

Dictionary dot com 本身并不是真正的
字典。

相反,它从许多
字典中收集信息。

总之,我不建议英语学习者使用它

它相当完整,虽然你不会
找到太多关于成语和搭配的信息。

更重要的是,信息没有很好的组织。

很多信息都隐藏在“查看更多”
链接后面,但

隐藏的内容和立即显示的内容似乎没有任何逻辑

另外,因为它
在一个页面上从不同的字典中收集信息,所以

信息被分成不同的部分,
但不是以一种合乎逻辑的方式。

这使您更难找到您需要的东西。

它不能很好地显示相关的
短语动词、成语和搭配。

你也不能直接查找短语动词,
这是一个很大的缺点。

柯林斯有一些积极的特点。

它的完整性得分为五分之四。

它对每个定义都有清晰的解释和示例

但是,有几件事可能会更好。

我们的测试词——“谈话”——既可以
是名词也可以是动词。

大多数词典将动词和
名词定义分开,这是有道理的。

柯林斯将它们混合在一个列表中。

这还不错,但看起来很奇怪,
我认为这可能会让一些用户感到困惑。

此外,它还提供了一些关于补语
和结构的信息,但不是很清楚。

他们强调了例句中使用的结构
,但没有

关于哪些结构是可能的
以及它们的含义的专门信息。

最后,就像我们列表中的其他一些词典一样
,Collins 尝试将来自

不同词典的结果组合在一页上。

我认为这是糟糕的设计,因为您
甚至可能没有意识到页面还有更多

部分。

你看到了定义和解释,
你走到了这里,然后……这看起来

像是结束了,对吧?

但是,还有更多:一本英国词典、
一本美国词典,以及更多示例

和习语。

总的来说,还不错,但不是最好的。

Lexico 是我们测试过的最好的词典之一

我强烈推荐它,特别是对于
中级或较低水平的学习者。

即使您是高级学习者,也请
尝试一下 Lexico。

为什么?

因为它是如此清晰和井井有条。

例如,它
为每个定义提供一个例句,但如果需要,您也可以

单击查看更多。

这是一个非常好的功能。

你只需要一个简单的例子?

你可以拥有它。

你想要更多?

你也可以拥有它。

一般来说,Lexico
在以合乎逻辑的方式呈现大量信息方面做得最好

但是,它也完全完成了。

只有两本词典在我们的完整性测试中得分为 100%
:Longman 和 Lexico。

此外,短语动词、搭配
和成语的信息很好地分开,您可以

直接查找更长的短语; 例如,
如果您直接查找“talk the talk”之类的成语

,您会找到一个专门的页面。

唯一的缺点是它没有解释
英国和美国发音或用法之间的差异

总的来说,我还发现 Lexico 在设计方面是最干净的
词典。

对于英语学习者来说,这是一个不错的选择。

Macmillan 略有不同,因为
它将不同的词性放在不同的

页面上。

因此,如果您查找“谈话”,您只会看到
动词的定义。

名词定义位于单独的页面上,
如果您

使用的是移动设备或较小的屏幕,可能不容易找到,因为
它们隐藏在“其他条目”

框中。

我不认为这是一个好点。

Macmillan 有一些积极的方面:它有很好
的动词补语信息,

也很好地呈现,你可以
直接查找短语动词和成语。

但是,它并不完整,也没有
提供任何有关英国与美国发音

或用法的信息。

所以,它在中间。

有更好的选择。

我知道 Wordreference 作为双语
词典。

他们有许多双语版本,针对
欧洲语言的讲者或学习者。

但是,它们还包括单语英语
词典。

有什么好处吗?

它有一些优点,但总的来说,
不推荐。

与dictionary dot com 一样,Wordreference
从多个词典中收集信息,

但这意味着您在一页上的信息太多
,其中一些重复,

很难找到您需要的内容。

您也不能直接查找短语动词或
成语。

如果您尝试查找像“pick up”这样的短语动词
,您将被重定向到

词根动词——“pick”。

然后,您必须
在页面上找到定义。

Wordreference 确实有一个优秀的
——至少在我们的测试中——独特的功能。

对于发音,它不仅有
英国和美国英语的音频,还有其他地区的音频,

如爱尔兰或牙买加。

它还包括一些地区性的英国和美国口音。

这真的很有用,因为实际上一个单词
不只有一种英国发音和一种

美国发音。

在英国、
美国和其他英语国家有很多英语口音

,很高兴了解
世界不同地区的发音有何不同。

所以,也许可以使用 Wordreference 作为发音
音频,但我不推荐它作为字典。

我会保持简短:不要使用钱伯斯。

两点:首先,它们
以大块的形式打印信息,就像您在纸质词典中找到的那样

这在纸面上是有道理的,因为您
需要节省金钱和空间。

在网络上,没有理由这样做,
而且更难找到你

要找的东西。

其次,钱伯斯似乎并不针对
将英语作为第二语言的学习者。

它没有给出很多例子,也
没有给出关于动词补语、

短语动词等的信息。

您不能直接查找短语动词或其他
较长的块。

这并不可怕; 它完成了字典的基本
工作,但我看不出有任何

使用它的理由。

Merriam-Webster 也没有太多可
推荐的。

一个主要缺点:当你查找一个单词时,它没有给出
完整的短语动词、成语或

搭配列表。

对于“谈话”,这里包括四个短语,但为什么是这
四个呢?

为什么不是其他人?

这看起来很奇怪; 如果要包含
一些短语动词或习语,则应包含

所有这些。

没有关于英国与美国发音
或用法的信息。

也没有关于动词补语的信息。

他们给出了例子,但这些例子不是
完整的句子,这使得它们不太有用。

最后,设计很奇怪。

在奇怪的地方有所有这些冒号和斜线

也许这不会打扰你,但我发现
它没有必要而且有点令人困惑。

另一方面,您可以直接查找短语
动词和成语。

此外,它还有
从互联网上提取的真实示例,尽管它们并不

总是准确分类。

例如,“talk”
作为动词的一些例子实际上是名词形式。

在查看了这些词典后,我
将我的首选在线词典从剑桥切换

到了朗文和词典。

老实说,我很惊讶剑桥
在这些考试中的表现如此糟糕。

虽然我认为 Longman 是最好的,但我
实际上会推荐 Lexico 用于大多数用途。

它为您提供完整的信息,而且
非常易于使用。

你呢?

你用哪本词典?

你打算换一个新的吗?

您对我们的评论有什么要补充的吗?

让我们在评论中知道!

感谢收看!