If you find yourself wondering about a word, just double-click it and FrameMaker will be happy to pass your request on to Webster.  Or double-click the Webster icon in the dock and multitasking will take you there directly. 
The Digital Webster window appears, and your word is looked up automatically.  Here, you can choose the dictionary, thesaurus or both (the icon images actually "open" or "close").
Instantly, you feel that sense of a minor miracle that comes with opening a huge dictionary to the exact page you needed.  The information you asked for is displayed just as you'd see it in the printed version of the dictionary--but in any type size you like.
The Digital Webster contains everything you'd find in the paper-and-ink version: the definitions, etymologies, even the illustrations.
For further inspiration, you can always borrow other books from the Digital Library.  There's the Oxford Dictionary of Quotations, as well as every word of Oxford's William Shakespeare: The Complete Works.  And, for the record, the Digital Library hardly puts a dent in the storage capacity of a single optical disk. 
The Digital Library is easily customized.  Add volumes of your past work--or any files you often refer to--and the Digital Librarian automatically indexes them as new "books" in the library.  Then, instead of duplicating your past efforts, you can sort through mountains of paperwork in seconds to pinpoint vital text or graphics, and copy it into new documents.  On a network, the Digital Library is accessible to all.