Most people open a dictionary to settle a question. The wiser reader opens it to start one. A good dictionary, being an invitation to roam, teaches the mind to wander with purpose and to notice how language gathers meaning through shade and proximity. The best discoveries come not from the term you mean to look up but from the others you encounter while you try to remember what you were originally seeking. Real learning depends as much on accident as on intent. To browse a dictionary is to enter a self-contained world where curiosity is the map and the destination.
Law dictionaries make this habit especially rich. A student may look up intrinsic evidence or intromission and, in the blink of an eye, drift toward introduce into evidence. Nobody would think to look up that phrase, yet it captures a defining gesture of courtroom life. Each unexpected encounter reveals more than meaning. It shows how the law breathes through its vocabulary and how every word carries the pulse of practice. In those chance discoveries, the student begins to hear the steady rhythm of legal language and to think with its precision and restraint.
Charles Alan Wright once said that with a good dictionary, you can look up one thing and finish fifteen minutes later knowing ten others. That kind of learning rarely unfolds on a screen. Yet the printed dictionary slows thought and quickens perception. As you turn pages, you stumble into words and phrases you didn’t expect and feel the murmur of language alive beneath your fingertips. To browse in this way is to practice wonder. You close the book with more than knowledge—with a renewed appetite, aware that more discoveries await you on the pages you haven’t yet examined.