term currently used within the scientific and technical community and for which a reliable source has been documented
associative relation
relation that exists when there is a thematic (non-hierarchical) connection between two concepts. Examples of associative relations include material-product, process-instrument, cause-effect
avoid
term the use of which is strongly discouraged on account of its inherent ambiguity, lack of standardization or because it is deprecated
non-proprietary name with which a certain type of product or service is identified as distinct from its trade or brand name
generic relation
hierarchical relation that exists between two concepts when the scope of the narrower concept (specific concept) includes the scope of the broader concept (generic concept) plus at least one additional characteristic. For example, in computer science, an optical mouse (specific concept) is a type of mouse (generic concept)
geographical variant
alternative spelling of a term identified as belonging to a specific geographical area in which a variant of a language is spoken
graphic
diagram, picture, movie or other audiovisual material used to illustrate the concept
hierarchical relation that exists between two concepts when the broader concept (comprehensive concept) represents a whole whilst the narrower concept (partitive concept) represents a part of that whole. For example, in anatomy, the retina, pupil and iris (partitive concepts) are parts of the eye (comprehensive concept)
term for a concept for which no specific designation is documented in a reliable source in the scientific and technical literature of a given language; or new term created by the PCT Translation Service, WIPO
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recommended
term that the PCT Translation Service, WIPO, recommends for use to designate a concept in a specific subject field
record
termbase entry that treats a single specific concept and contains terms designating that concept in a minimum of 2 languages and a maximum of 10
reliable source
any text in which a term occurs that was originally drafted by a subject field expert in the language in question; reliable sources include, for example, patents, scientific and technical articles and textbooks, academic papers
results view
shows the results of the query
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scientific name
term which is part of an international scientific nomenclature as adopted by an appropriate scientific body
search concept
allows the user to search for a term directly in the concept maps
search term
allows the user to search for a term in term and transcription fields; the logic operators AND, OR, NOT, and the asterisk (*), the question mark (?) and the quotation marks (“”) are also supported
provides etymological and phraseological information, information on term usage, frequent collocations of the term, and similar points of interest
term reliability
score that assigns a reliability rating to a given term according to the following criteria:
no reliable source, validation by PCT Translation Service, WIPO
no reliable source, validation by PCT Translation Service, WIPO, and by external subject field experts
reliable source, validation by PCT Translation Service, WIPO
reliable source, validation by PCT Translation Service, WIPO, and by external subject field experts
term type
indicates whether for a given concept the term in question should be regarded as the preferred term (head term) or not (synonym)
transcription
alternative form of a term resulting from an operation whereby the characters of one writing system are represented by characters from another writing system
transfer comment
provides information on the degree of equivalence between a term in one language and another term in another language to designate a given concept
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uncount.
uncountable, i.e. mass noun; value of number field