Signaling a possible official launch

Dec 4, 2009 09:24 GMT  ·  By

Google's self-proclaimed goal is to organize the world's information and, for the most part, it sticks to that. Once in a while though, it's not satisfied with what it finds or the way the information is available elsewhere, so it just builds its own resource. And when you've got thousands of the world's brightest engineers and designers working for you, it's no surprise if you usually get it right. There are maybe thousands of dictionary tools and websites out there, yet Google must have felt that the space wasn't catered to very well, so it released its own full-blown dictionary tool complete with definitions, synonyms and everything else you'd expect.

Google hasn't made any official announcement and it looks like the tool is just being rolled out in its current form. Things get a little murky as google.com/dictionary has been around for almost a year now as a stand-alone service. It was initially part of the Google Translate set of tools. However, up till recently it served as an aggregator of results from the various dictionary sites around the web.

The site is pretty much what you'd expect from a Google dictionary. A query will return all the usual info found in any dictionary, no surprises here. It also returns definitions from the web, like it has done for a while now, and you can star words to “bookmark” them. The layout and design screams “Google” with a very minimalistic and utilitarian look, again, unsurprising.

It should be noted that some queries, for more obscure words or concepts, don't return any results from Google, but just the ones it's able to find on other sites. The site doesn't feel like a beta, but perhaps the lack of content is why the company hasn't made any big announcements yet.

Another clue that Google may be heading for an official unveiling is that clicking on the 'definition' link which shows up for one-word queries doesn't lead to an Answers.com page, as has been the case for many years, but rather to Google's own dictionary. This change isn't live for everyone, but it was revealed in Answers.com's Q3 earnings call saying that it should come sometime in Q4 which is now being confirmed 'in the wild'.

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Google Dictionary now has native definitions for most common words
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