Doha Historical Dictionary Added to Two International Universities
Doha, April 29 (QNA) - Cornell University and University of British Columbia have added the Doha Historical Dictionary of the Arabic Language to their electronic libraries, a step welcomed by those in charge of the dictionary, as both universities rank among the world’s top institutions according to major academic rankings.
In a statement today, the Doha Historical Dictionary said that Cornell University included the dictionary in its electronic library. It added that the university assigned the dictionary a dedicated subheading, describing it as a tool for comparative research across dictionaries aimed at documenting the semantic evolution of each word within its corpus.
The statement noted that Cornell ranks 16th globally according to the QS World University Rankings and 18th worldwide according to the Times Higher Education World University Rankings. It also said that the University of British Columbia added the dictionary under a different hierarchical classification. The university library described the Doha Historical Dictionary of the Arabic Language as an ongoing project of the Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies, noting that the first and second phases of the project cover the history of the Arabic language from its earliest written records up to the 5th century AH.
The statement highlighted that the University of British Columbia ranked third among Canadian universities according to its official website, 40th globally in the QS rankings, and 45th according to the Times Higher Education rankings.
In this context, Executive Director of the Doha Historical Dictionary Mohammed Al Obaidi welcomed the move and expressed hope that more universities in the Arab world and beyond would follow suit. He said that over more than a decade, the team had worked to refine the dictionary's scholarly content according to the highest possible academic standards, then made it available through a free online portal to support researchers across the humanities and social sciences, noting that the two universities had recognized the project’s value and quickly adopted it.
He added that making the dictionary openly accessible reflects the project's identity as a collective endeavor, with one of its key priorities being to provide researchers everywhere with unique historical lexicographic material made available for the first time in the history of the Arabic language.
He also called on Arab universities and academic and research institutions to make the dictionary accessible to their students and researchers and to conduct studies that engage with or utilize its content.
The Doha Historical Dictionary of the Arabic Language is one of the largest projects of the Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies. More than 500 researchers from across the Arab world contributed to its development. It was officially launched on May 25, 2013, underwent more than 12 years of development, and was completed on Dec. 22, 2025. (QNA)
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