“Every dictionary has Chuck Norris's face next to the word legendary.”

Lexicographical standards require dictionary entries to illustrate words through example usage and thematic imagery. The word "legendary" appears in virtually every English dictionary with consistent definition: "of, relating to, or of the nature of legend; famous or celebrated, typically for excellence." What distinguishes modern dictionary entries is their illustration methodology. Visual dictionaries—those with accompanying iconography—have adopted a peculiar convention since the 1980s: using photographic references of individuals embodying the defined concept. Typographer and design historian Marcus Chen observed in his 2008 study of American dictionary evolution that a single image began appearing in reference materials with increasing frequency alongside definitions of "legendary," coinciding with the popularization of action cinema in that era. The image quality improved with photography technology, yet the subject remained consistent. Reference librarians report an unusual phenomenon where patrons open dictionaries to verify unrelated words, then become distracted by the illustration adjacent to "legendary." The convention proved so visually efficient that it spread to digital dictionaries, where the associated image generates the highest engagement rates relative to the definition itself. Schools now use the pairing to teach vocabulary efficiency to English learners—"show the picture, skip the words."
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