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massysettyesterday at 7:29 PM5 repliesview on HN

We have what I've dreamed of for years: the reverse dictionary.

Put in a word and see what it means? That's been easy for at least a century. Have a meaning in mind and get the word? The only way to get this before was to read a ton of books and be knowledgable or talk to someone who was. Now it's always available.


Replies

astrashe2yesterday at 7:32 PM

This is a great description of how I use Claude.

terminalbraidyesterday at 7:30 PM

> Now it's always available.

And often incorrect! (and occasionally refuses to answer)

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wizzwizz4yesterday at 7:34 PM

The "reverse dictionary" is called a "thesaurus". Wikipedia quotes Peter Mark Roget (1852):

> ...to find the word, or words, by which [an] idea may be most fitly and aptly expressed

Digital reverse dictionaries / thesauri like https://www.onelook.com/thesaurus/ can take natural language input, and afaict are strictly better at this task than LLMs. (I didn't know these tools existed when I wrote the rest of this comment.)

I briefly investigated LLMs for this purpose, back when I didn't know how to use a thesaurus; but I find thesauruses a lot more useful. (Actually, I'm usually too lazy to crack out a proper thesaurus, so I spend 5 seconds poking around Wiktionary first: that's usually Good Enough™ to find me an answer, when I find an answer I can trust it, and I get the answer faster than waiting for an LLM to finish generating a response.)

There's definitely room to improve upon the traditional "big book of synonyms with double-indirect pointers" thesaurus, but LLMs are an extremely crude solution that I don't think actually is an improvement.

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cess11yesterday at 10:19 PM

"The only way to get this before was to read a ton of books and be knowledgable or talk to someone who was"

Did you have trouble with this part?

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