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It is an easy and fast process, although the Sony readers, because they have touch screen, use a relatively faster way. In the Kindle you don't have to press any button, just place the cursor before the word you want to look up and the definition intermediately appears at the bottom of the screen. Good luck deciding, and if you do decide to buy an e-reader, I hope you enjoy the dictionary functions on it as much as I do! So depending on what you decide, you may want to see the new models first.
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I'm not sure if nook is coming out with any new ones anytime soon. Also, I think Kindle may be coming out with a touch model sometime soon as well. Sony is apparently coming out with new ones sometime soon (maybe this month or next). If you decide to go LCD, you seem to be looking in the right direction by considering the nook colour.įinally, there are new e-readers coming out soon. So in summary, if you decide to go e-ink, I'd suggest considering a Sony. I haven't used one, but I've heard good things about the nook colour and I'm sure others will be in here to comment on it. But if you decide that you are OK with both those, then I'd suggest looking into one. Also, some people don't like reading for too long on an LCD screen, as you mentioned your'e not sure about. You will have to recharge much more often (as in hours instead of days). The biggest drawback for LCD is battery life. The responsiveness on e-ink is not a deal-breaker for me at all, even using the dictionary, highlighting and note-taking features often, but I can see how others may prefer an LCD screen. To give you an idea, once I tap a word it usually takes a few seconds for the dictionary definition to pop up. I love my e-ink screen and my Sony, but there it can be slow in responding which from what I hear is the same on any e-ink screen. However, if you don't mind LCD, perhaps one of those screens may be better for you given your concern about responsiveness, if by less responsive you basically mean slower when being interacted with. I cannot comment on the Cybook Bookeen as I don't know much about it. On a Sony, you can use your finger or the included stylus and tap on the word and the definition will pop up. You have to manually press buttons and scroll with buttons to the word each time to look it up, which I haven't tried but seems like it would be more cumbersome for someone who uses it often. If you plan to be using the dictionary a lot, I wouldn't recommend the Kindle. But if you'd rather the definition in English as well, it has two choices of dictionary, the New Oxford American and the Oxford. In fact, as mentioned by Terisa de morgan, Sony also has built-in dictionaries in other languages, including English-French. I would recommend Sony as a quality e-reader brand with very good dictionaries. I strongly suspect that you will gain much by acquiring an e-reader with a good dictionary feature. I absolutely LOVE being able to tap on a word to look it up in a dictionary, and I use that feature all the time, as it sounds like you would too. Simply, YES YES YES! That is at the very top of the list of huge improvements in reading quality for me in switching to an e-reader as opposed to paper books. Do you think I would benefit from an e-book reader in this regard ?