This work is funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council
(AHRC) Grant IDs
AH/S011064/1 and
AH/W007290/1, both
led by the Faculty of Linguistics, Philology and Phonetics at the
University of Oxford, UK. Visit the central webpage of the Enggano
project.
EnoLEX edited by Daniel Krauße, Gede Primahadi W. Rajeg, Cokorda Pramartha, Erik Zoebel, Charlotte Hemmings, I Wayan Arka, and Mary Dalrymple is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International
Please cite the EnoLEX online database and the proceedings paper describing it as follows:
Krauße, Daniel, Gede Primahadi Wijaya Rajeg, Cokorda Pramartha, Erik Zoebel, Charlotte Hemmings, I Wayan Arka, Mary Dalrymple (2024). EnoLEX: A Diachronic Lexical Database for the Enggano Language. Available online at https://enggano.shinyapps.io/enolex/
Rajeg, Gede Primahadi Wijaya, Daniel Krauße, and Cokorda Rai Adi Pramartha (2024). EnoLEX: A Diachronic Lexical Database for the Enggano language. In Proceedings of AsiaLex 2024 (The Asian Association for Lexicography 2024 Hybrid Conference). Toyo University, Tokyo: Japan.
EnoLEX is published as a Shiny web application programmed in R by Gede Primahadi Wijaya Rajeg.
EnoLEX collates lexical data from legacy materials and contemporary fieldwork data about the Enggano language, ranging from simple/short and extensive word lists, anthropological and ethnographic writings, a dictionary, thesis, and contemporary Enggano data. The materials span over 150 years from the middle of the 19th century up to the present. With expert cognate-judgement, EnoLEX offers historical development of word forms expressing a certain concept/meaning.