jDictionary is a powerful multi-platform dictionary application written in Java. It features a nice Swing GUI and an easy-to-use plugin management system, which is able to download and install plugins automagically from the Web. Apart from dictionary-rel
A user-friendly Java-based DICT client. That means it is basically an Internet dictionary, which will look up words for you over the Internet and define them for you.
DiCT try to establish a well known dictionary web service, it will publish web service (WSDL) definitation for both content provider and end-user to follow. it will base on DICT protocol ( RFC2229) . Some applications will be provided
J3's mainstay is a mutlilingual dictionary program with some cool utilities - and maybe games - for an international milieu. It is written in Java and is localizable (l10n) to work in any natural language, with minimal mucking about.
Real-time error alerts, performance insights, and anomaly detection across your full stack. Free 30-day trial.
Move from alert to fix before users notice. AppSignal monitors errors, performance bottlenecks, host health, and uptime—all from one dashboard. Instant notifications on deployments, anomaly triggers for memory spikes or error surges, and seamless log management. Works out of the box with Rails, Django, Express, Phoenix, Next.js, and dozens more. Starts at $23/month with no hidden fees.
The medieval glossarium of du Cange (XML+PHP+lucene)
The medieval glossarium of du Cange is a dictionary of medieval languages (mainly, latin, old french, and some greek). This open source project host the XML files, and apps to serve the datas.
Dictionnaire is an open-source French-English dictionary intended to cover modern phraseology as well as entries that are difficult to translate using traditional dictionaries.
A platform independent, versatile and purely offline DESKTop dictIONARY. Feature of platform independence makes it a unique dictionary which can be run on almost every operating systems. Sounds for pronounciation of words may be added in future.
Ultimate dictionary that not only holds words but teaches them as well
There are many dictionaries so making another one can look words up would be extremely useless. But what if a dictionary could even teach those words put into it?
What do you think?