I'm tempted to mark this as Confirmed, not because this particularly bugs me, but because the reasoning makes sense, and the bug exposes a fundamental design problem in dictionaries-common: what is installed is installed system-wide, with no optoin for the user to override what is being displayed.
Perhaps one could argue that this should be pushed down to individual applications which use dictionaries-common, but most Ubuntu installations are single-user (hard to say what sort of statistics to assume for the Debian upstream) and should give the user control over this type of thing.
I'm tempted to mark this as Confirmed, not because this particularly bugs me, but because the reasoning makes sense, and the bug exposes a fundamental design problem in dictionaries- common: what is installed is installed system-wide, with no optoin for the user to override what is being displayed.
Perhaps one could argue that this should be pushed down to individual applications which use dictionaries- common, but most Ubuntu installations are single-user (hard to say what sort of statistics to assume for the Debian upstream) and should give the user control over this type of thing.