Matches in LOV for { ?s <http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#scopeNote> ?o. }
- C1001 scopeNote "Includes access points designated as authorized (or preferred) forms of names (i.e., authorized access points) as well as those designated as variant forms of name (i.e., variant access points). Includes access points based on personal, family, and corporate names. Includes access points based on titles (i.e., names) for works, expressions, manifestations, and items. Includes access points consisting of a combination of two access points, as in the case of a creator/title access point for a work which consists of an authorized access point for the name of the creator combined with an authorized access point for the name (i.e., the title) of the work. Includes access points based on names and terms for events, objects, concepts, and places. Includes access points based on identifiers, such as standard numbers, classification indicia. Elements added to the name per se (e.g., dates) form an integral part of the controlled access point.".
- C1002 scopeNote "Includes royal families, dynasties, houses of nobility, etc. Includes patriarchies and matriarchies. Includes groups of individuals sharing a common ancestral lineage. Includes family units (parents, children, grandchildren, etc.). Includes the successive holders of a title in a house of nobility, viewed collectively (e.g., Dukes of Norfolk).".
- C1003 scopeNote "Includes occasional groups and groups that are constituted as meetings, conferences, congresses, expeditions, exhibitions, festivals, fairs, etc. Includes musical performing groups, groups of visual artists, and dance companies producing collective work. Includes organizations that act as territorial authorities, exercising or claiming to exercise government functions over a certain territory, such as a federation, a state, a region, a local municipality. Includes organizations and groups that are defunct as well as those that continue to operate. Includes fictitious organizations or groups of persons.".
- C1006 scopeNote "Includes names by which persons, families, and corporate bodies are known. Includes titles by which works, expressions, and manifestations are known. Includes names and terms by which concepts, objects, events, and places are known. Includes real names, pseudonyms, religious names, initials, and separate letters, numerals, or symbols. Includes forenames (or given names), matronymics, patronymics, family names (or surnames), dynastic names, etc. Includes given names of sovereigns, popes, etc., with associated roman numerals. Includes names of families, clans, dynasties, houses of nobility, etc. Includes names representing the successive holders of a title in houses of nobility, etc., viewed collectively (e.g., Dukes of Norfolk). Includes names used by a corporate body at various periods in its history. Includes names of associations, institutions, business firms, not-for-profit enterprises, etc. Includes names of governments, government agencies, projects, programmes, government officials, delegations, legislative bodies, armed forces, etc. Includes names of religious bodies, local churches, etc., religious councils, religious officials, provinces, dioceses, synods, etc., papal diplomatic missions, etc. Includes names of conferences, congresses, meetings, etc. Includes names of exhibitions, athletic contests, expeditions, fairs, festivals, etc. Includes names of subordinate and related bodies. Includes numbers that form an integral part of the name of a corporate body or event. Includes trade names. Includes titles of content, parts of content, compilations of content, etc. Includes titles by which a work has become known. Includes the title proper of the original manifestation of a work. Includes titles by which a work is identified in reference sources. Includes titles under which a work has been published. Includes titles by which manifestations of an expression have become known. Includes the title proper of the original manifestation of an expression. Includes titles by which manifestations of an expression are identified in reference sources. Includes titles under which manifestations of an expression have been published. Includes the title proper of the original edition of a manifestation. Includes titles by which a manifestation is identified in reference sources. Includes variant titles appearing on or in a manifestation. Includes names and terms for events, objects, concepts, and places.".
- C1007 scopeNote "Includes cataloguing rules and interpretations of those rules. Includes coding conventions.".
- C1008 scopeNote "Includes libraries, national bibliographic agencies, bibliographic utilities, consortia, museums, archives, rights management organizations, etc.".
- C1009 scopeNote "Includes identifiers such as social insurance numbers assigned by a government authority. Includes personal identifiers assigned by other registration authorities. Includes business registration numbers, registration numbers for charitable organizations, etc., assigned by a government authority. Includes corporate body identifiers assigned by other registration authorities (e.g., ISBN publisher’s prefix). \nIncludes standard identifiers assigned by registration authorities identifying content (e.g., ISRC, ISWC, ISAN). Includes standard identifiers assigned by registration authorities identifying manifestations (e.g., ISBN, ISSN). Includes thematic index numbers assigned to a musical work by the publisher, or a musicologist. Includes catalogue raisonné numbers. Includes identifiers for items assigned by repositories (e.g., shelf number). Includes classification numbers referencing specific entities (e.g., a classification number assigned to a particular painting). Includes registered trademarks.".
- C1010 scopeNote "What is perceived as a specific instance of a particular entity type may vary from one set of rules to another.".
- P2017 scopeNote "Includes relationships between an original work and a broad range of modifications from the original, including variations or versions of that work, such as editions, revisions, translations, summaries, abstracts, and digests. Includes new works that are adaptations or modifications that become new works but are based on an earlier work (improvisations, etc.); new works that are changes of genre (transformations, dramatizations, novelizations, etc.); and, new works based on the style or thematic content of other works (free translations, paraphrases, imitations, parodies, etc.).".
- P2018 scopeNote "Includes relationships between an original work and a broad range of modifications from the original, including variations or versions of that work, such as editions, revisions, translations, summaries, abstracts, and digests. Includes new works that are adaptations or modifications that become new works but are based on an earlier work (improvisations, etc.); new works that are changes of genre (transformations, dramatizations, novelizations, etc.); and, new works based on the style or thematic content of other works (free translations, paraphrases, imitations, parodies, etc.).".
- P3001 scopeNote "Includes categorizations, such as clan, dynasty, family unit, patriarchy, matriarchy, etc.".
- P3006 scopeNote "Includes terms and/or codes designating the type of access point (e.g., personal name access point, family name access point, corporate name access point, meeting name access point, territorial name access point, title access point, collective title access point or access points consisting of a combination of names, such as creator/title access points).".
- P3017 scopeNote "Includes the name element in a controlled access point beginning with the name of a person, family, or corporate body. Includes the phrase element in a controlled access point beginning with a phrase associated with a person that is used in lieu of a name as such when the name of the person is unknown (e.g., A Physician, Author of Early Impressions). Includes the name element for a subordinate or related body in a controlled access point beginning with the name of a superior body. Includes the name element for a government agency, official, legislative body, court, etc., in a controlled access point beginning with the name for the territorial authority. Includes the name element for a religious council, official, province, synod, etc., in a controlled access point beginning with the name for the religious body. Includes the title element in a controlled access point for a work. Includes a term designating form at the beginning of the title element of a controlled access point for a musical work or expression (e.g., Symphony, Concerto). Includes conventional and collective titles at the beginning of the title element of a controlled access point for a work or expression (e.g., Treaties, Laws, Works, Selections, Piano music). Includes the additional element(s) in a collective title controlled access point (i.e., a subsequent term or terms used to subdivide the collective uniform title)".
- P3019 scopeNote "Includes the title of the rules, etc., and, as necessary, the name of the body responsible for the rules, the edition designation, date, etc.".
- P3021 scopeNote "Includes alphabetic strings identifying the numbering system (e.g., \"ISBN\", \"ISSN\", \"ISRC\"). Includes symbols designating the type of identifier (e.g., registered trademark symbol)".
- P3029 scopeNote "E.g., male, female, unknown, other.".
- P3035 scopeNote "Includes street address, postal address, telephone number, e-mail address, etc. Includes the address of a World Wide Web site operated by the person, about the person or related to the person.".
- P3041 scopeNote "Includes addresses for the corporate body's headquarters and/or other offices. Includes street address, postal address, telephone number, e-mail address, etc. Includes the address of a World Wide Web site operated by the corporate body, about the corporate body or related to the corporate body.".
- P3043 scopeNote "Includes historical information pertaining to an organization, institution, etc.".
- P4016 scopeNote "Includes splits, mergers, subsequent meetings or conferences.".
- P4018 scopeNote "The subject term and the classification number may also be viewed as parallel names or identifiers for the name of the same entity.".
- P4025 scopeNote "Includes translations of the name for the corporate body.".
- P4032 scopeNote "Includes orthographic variant names (spelling variations, transliterations, punctuation variations, capitalization variations), word order variant names (inversions, permutations).".
- C1001 scopeNote "A work is an abstract entity; there is no single material object one can point to as the work. We recognize the work through individual realizations or expressions of the work, but the work itself exists only in the commonality of content between and among the various expressions of the work. Because the notion of a work is abstract, it is difficult to define precise boundaries for the entity. The concept of what constitutes a work and where the line of demarcation lies between one work and another may in fact be viewed differently from one culture to another. Consequently the bibliographic conventions established by various cultures or national groups may differ in terms of the criteria they use for determining the boundaries between one work and another. For the purposes of this model variant texts incorporating revisions or updates to an earlier text are viewed simply as expressions of the same work (i.e., the variant texts are not viewed as separate works). Similarly, abridgements or enlargements of an existing text, or the addition of parts or an accompaniment to a musical composition are considered to be different expressions of the same work. Translations from one language to another, musical transcriptions and arrangements, and dubbed or subtitled versions of a film are also considered simply as different expressions of the same original work. By contrast, when the modification of a work involves a significant degree of independent intellectual or artistic effort, the result is viewed, for the purpose of this model, as a new work. Thus paraphrases, rewritings, adaptations for children, parodies, musical variations on a theme and free transcriptions of a musical composition are considered to represent new works. Similarly, adaptations of a work from one literary or art form to another (e.g., dramatizations, adaptations from one medium of the graphic arts to another, etc.) are considered to represent new works. Abstracts, digests and summaries are also considered to represent new works.".
- C1002 scopeNote "An expression is the specific intellectual or artistic form that a work takes each time it is \"realized\". Expression encompasses, for example, the specific words, sentences, paragraphs, etc. that result from the realization of a work in the form of a text, or the particular sounds, phrasing, etc. resulting from the realization of a musical work. The boundaries of the entity expression are defined, however, so as to exclude aspects of physical form, such as typeface and page layout, that are not integral to the intellectual or artistic realization of the work as such. Inasmuch as the form of expression is an inherent characteristic of the expression, any change in form (e.g., from alpha-numeric notation to spoken word) results in a new expression. Similarly, changes in the intellectual conventions or instruments that are employed to express a work (e.g., translation from one language to another) result in the production of a new expression. If a text is revised or modified, the resulting expression is considered to be a new expression. The degree to which bibliographic distinctions are made between variant expressions of a work will depend to some extent on the nature of the work itself, on the anticipated needs of users and on what the cataloguer can reasonably be expected to recognize from the manifestation being described. Differences in form of expression (e.g., the differences between the expression of a work in the form of musical notation and the expression of the same work in the form of recorded sound) will normally be reflected in the bibliographic record, no matter what the nature of the work itself may be. Variant expressions in the same form (e.g., revised versions of a text) will often be indirectly identified as different expressions because the variation is apparent from the data associated with an attribute used to identify the manifestation in which the expression is embodied (e.g., an edition statement). Variations that would be evident only from a more detailed analysis and comparison of expressions (e.g., variations between several of the early texts of Shakespeare's Hamlet) would normally be reflected in the data only if the nature or stature of the work warranted such analysis, and only if it was anticipated that the distinction would be important to users.".
- C1003 scopeNote "The entity defined as manifestation encompasses a wide range of materials, including manuscripts, books, periodicals, maps, posters, sound recordings, films, video recordings, CD-ROMs, multimedia kits, etc. As an entity, manifestation represents all the physical objects that bear the same characteristics, in respect to both intellectual content and physical form. When a work is realized, the resulting expression of the work may be physically embodied on or in a medium such as paper, audio tape, video tape, canvas, plaster, etc. That physical embodiment constitutes a manifestation of the work. In some cases there may be only a single physical exemplar produced of that manifestation of the work (e.g., an author's manuscript, a tape recorded for an oral history archive, an original oil painting, etc.). In other cases there are multiple copies produced in order to facilitate public dissemination or distribution. In those cases there is normally a more formal production process involved, and a publisher, producer, or distributor takes responsibility for the process. In other cases there may be only a limited number of copies made of an original exemplar for purposes such as private study (e.g., a dubbing of an original recording of a piece of music), or preservation (e.g., a photocopy produced on permanent paper of an author's original typescript). Whether the scope of production is broad (e.g., in the case of publication, etc.) or limited (e.g., in the case of copies made for private study, etc.), the set of copies produced in each case constitutes a manifestation. All copies produced that form part of the same set are considered to be copies of the same manifestation. The boundaries between one manifestation and another are drawn on the basis of both intellectual content and physical form. When the production process involves changes in physical form the resulting product is considered a new manifestation. Changes in physical form include changes affecting display characteristics (e.g., a change in typeface, size of font, page layout, etc.), changes in physical medium (e.g., a change from paper to microfilm as the medium of conveyance), and changes in the container (e.g., a change from cassette to cartridge as the container for a tape). Where the production process involves a publisher, producer, distributor, etc., and there are changes signalled in the product that are related to publication, marketing, etc. (e.g., a change in publisher, repackaging, etc.), the resulting product may be considered a new manifestation. Whenever the production process involves modifications, additions, deletions, etc. that affect the intellectual or artistic content, the result is a new manifestation embodying a new expression of the work. Changes that occur deliberately or even inadvertently in the production process that affect the copies result, strictly speaking, in a new manifestation. A manifestation resulting from such a change may be identified as a particular \"state\" or \"issue\" of the publication. Changes that occur to an individual copy after the production process is complete (e.g., the loss of a page, rebinding, etc.) are not considered to result in a new manifestation. That copy is simply considered to be an exemplar (or item) of the manifestation that deviates from the copy as produced.".
- C1004 scopeNote "The entity defined as item is a concrete entity. It is in many instances a single physical object (e.g., a copy of a one-volume monograph, a single audio cassette, etc.). There are instances, however, where the entity defined as item comprises more than one physical object (e.g., a monograph issued as two separately bound volumes, a recording issued on three separate compact discs, etc.). In terms of intellectual content and physical form, an item exemplifying a manifestation is normally the same as the manifestation itself. However, variations may occur from one item to another, even when the items exemplify the same manifestation, where those variations are the result of actions external to the intent of the producer of the manifestation (e.g., damage occurring after the item was produced, binding performed by a library, etc.).".
- C1005 scopeNote "The entity defined as person encompasses individuals that are deceased as well as those that are living. For the purposes of this model persons are treated as entities only to the extent that they are involved in the creation or realization of a work (e.g., as authors, composers, artists, editors, translators, directors, performers, etc.), or are the subject of a work (e.g., as the subject of a biographical or autobiographical work, of a history, etc.).".
- C1006 scopeNote "The entity defined as corporate body encompasses organizations and groups of individuals and-or organizations that are identified by a particular name, including occasional groups and groups that are constituted as meetings, conferences, congresses, expeditions, exhibitions, festivals, fairs, etc. The entity also encompasses organizations that act as territorial authorities, exercising or claiming to exercise government functions over a certain territory, such as a federation, a state, a region, a local municipality, etc. The entity encompasses organizations and groups that are defunct as well as those that continue to operate. For the purposes of this model corporate bodies are treated as entities only to the extent that they are involved in the creation or realization of a work (e.g., as the sponsors or endorsers of a work, etc.), or are the subject of a work (e.g., as the subject of a history, etc.).".
- C1007 scopeNote "The entity defined as concept encompasses a comprehensive range of abstractions that may be the subject of a work: fields of knowledge, disciplines, schools of thought (philosophies, religions, political ideologies, etc.), theories, processes, techniques, practices, etc. A concept may be broad in nature or narrowly defined and precise. For the purposes of this model concepts are treated as entities only to the extent that they are the subject of a work (e.g., as the subject of a philosophical treatise, of a critique of a school of thought, etc.).".
- C1008 scopeNote "The entity defined as object encompasses a comprehensive range of material things that may be the subject of a work: animate and inanimate objects occurring in nature; fixed, movable, and moving objects that are the product of human creation; objects that no longer exist. For the purposes of this model objects are treated as entities only to the extent that they are the subject of a work (e.g., as the subject of a scientific study, etc.).".
- C1009 scopeNote "The entity defined as event encompasses a comprehensive range of actions and occurrences that may be the subject of a work: historical events, epochs, periods of time, etc. For the purposes of this model events are treated as entities only to the extent that they are the subject of a work (e.g., the subject of an historical treatise, of a painting, etc.).".
- C1010 scopeNote "The entity defined as place encompasses a comprehensive range of locations: terrestrial and extra-terrestrial; historical and contemporary; geographic features and geo-political jurisdictions. For the purposes of this model places are treated as entities only to the extent that they are the subject of a work (e.g., the subject of a map or atlas, or of a travel guide, etc.).".
- P2057 scopeNote "The component work may be intended to be used in the context of the prior work or may not depend to any significant extent on the context provided by the prior work.".
- P2058 scopeNote "The component work may be intended to be used in the context of the prior work or may not depend to any significant extent on the context provided by the prior work.".
- P2063 scopeNote "Free translations are treated in the model as new works.".
- P2064 scopeNote "Free translations are treated in the model as new works.".
- P2079 scopeNote "The component expression may be intended to be used in the context of the prior expression or may not depend to any significant extent on the context provided by the prior expression.".
- P2080 scopeNote "The component expression may be intended to be used in the context of the prior expression or may not depend to any significant extent on the context provided by the prior expression.".
- P2083 scopeNote "The alternate relationship obtains, for example, when a publication, sound recording, video, etc. is issued in more than one format or when it is released simultaneously by different publishers in different countries.".
- P2085 scopeNote "The component manifestation may be a discrete physical unit of the prior manifestation or may be an integral part that is physically inseparable from the whole of the prior expression.".
- P2086 scopeNote "The component manifestation may be a discrete physical unit of the prior manifestation or may be an integral part that is physically inseparable from the whole of the prior manifestation.".
- P2088 scopeNote "Most commonly, an item of one manifestation is bound with an item of a different manifestation to make a new item.".
- P2091 scopeNote "The component item may be a discrete physical unit of the prior item or may be an integral part that is physically inseparable from the whole of the prior item.".
- P2094 scopeNote "The reproduction relationship will be stated at this level when it is useful to indicate the specific item used, as opposed to stating the relationship at the more general level of manifestation-to-manifestation.".
- P3001 scopeNote "There may be one or more titles associated with a work. If the work has appeared under varying titles (differing in form, language, etc.), a bibliographic agency normally selects one of those titles as the basis of a \"uniform title\" for purposes of consistency in naming and referencing the work. Other titles under which the work has appeared may be treated as variant titles for the work, or in some cases as a parallel uniform title. The title of a work that forms part of a larger work may consist solely of a number or other generic designation that is dependent on the title of the larger work.".
- P3002 scopeNote "E.g., novel, play, poem, essay, biography, symphony, concerto, sonata, map, drawing, painting, photograph, etc.".
- P3003 scopeNote "The date (normally the year) may be a single date or a range of dates. In the absence of an ascertainable date of creation, the date of the work may be associated with the date of its first publication or release.".
- P3008 scopeNote "There may be one or more titles associated with an expression. The title of an expression that forms part of a larger expression may consist solely of a number or other generic designation that is dependent on the title of the larger expression.".
- P3009 scopeNote "E.g., through alpha-numeric notation, musical notation, spoken word, musical sound, cartographic image, photographic image, sculpture, dance, mime, etc.".
- P3010 scopeNote "E.g., the date the particular text of a work was written or revised, the date a song was performed, etc. The date may be a single date or a range of dates. In the absence of an ascertainable date of expression, the date of the expression may be associated with the date of its publication or release.".
- P3011 scopeNote "The language of the expression may comprise a number of languages, each pertaining to an individual component of the expression.".
- P3012 scopeNote "E.g., the names used to differentiate the various versions of the English text of the Bible, or an \"edition\" or version designation relating to the intellectual content of the expression such as \"2nd revision\".".
- P3013 scopeNote "E.g., an expression that is completed one part at a time, segment by segment, issue by issue, etc.".
- P3014 scopeNote "E.g., a draft or interim report, a directory that is expected to be updated periodically.".
- P3015 scopeNote "E.g., number of words in a text, statements in a computer program, images in a comic strip, etc. For works expressed as sound and, or, motion the extent may be a measure of duration; e.g., playing time.".
- P3019 scopeNote "Use restrictions may be based in copyright, or they may extend beyond the protections guaranteed in law to the owner of the copyright.".
- P3020 scopeNote "There may be one or more titles associated with a manifestation. Titles associated with a manifestation include all those that appear in the manifestation itself (e.g., the title on the title page, title frame, etc., a cover title, added title-page title, caption title, running title, spine title, etc., the title in a colophon, explicit, etc., the title on a container, on a microfiche header, etc.), as well as those that have been assigned to the manifestation for purposes of bibliographic control (e.g., key title, expanded title, translated title, supplied title, etc.).".
- P3021 scopeNote "An individual or group named may be directly responsible for the work embodied in the manifestation (e.g., the author, composer, etc.), or indirectly responsible (e.g., the author of a novel on which a film script is based). Other individuals or groups named in the statement may include those responsible for the expression of the work contained in the manifestation (e.g., translators, performers, etc.), or those responsible for the compilation of works contained in the manifestation (e.g., the editor, compiler, etc.). A statement of responsibility may name an organization responsible for sponsoring or issuing the work contained in the manifestation. The statement may also indicate the role or function performed by each of the individuals, groups, or organizations responsible. The names appearing in the statement of responsibility in the manifestation may or may not be those of the persons and corporate bodies actually responsible for the creation or realization of the intellectual or artistic content embodied in the manifestation. Similarly, the stated functions may or may not reflect the actual relationship that exists between the individuals and groups named and the intellectual or artistic content.".
- P3022 scopeNote "A series statement may also include a number designating the sequential position of the manifestation within the series. There may be one or more series and, or, subseries named in the manifestation.".
- P3023 scopeNote "E.g., sound cassette, videodisc, microfilm cartridge, transparency, etc. The carrier for a manifestation comprising multiple physical components may include more than one form (e.g., a filmstrip with an accompanying booklet, a separate sound disc carrying the sound track for a film, etc.).".
- P3024 scopeNote "E.g., number of sheets, discs, reels, etc.".
- P3025 scopeNote "E.g., paper, wood, plastic, metal, etc. The physical medium may include in addition to the base material any material that is applied to the base (e.g., oil paint applied to canvas, a chemical emulsion applied to a film base, etc.). Each component of a manifestation comprising multiple physical components may be produced from a different type of material.".
- P3026 scopeNote "E.g., analogue, acoustic, electric, digital, optical etc.".
- P3027 scopeNote "The dimensions may comprise measurements of height (e.g., 18 cm bound volume), width (e.g., 8mm film), height x width (e.g., 5 x 5 cm slide), height x width x depth (e.g., 9 x 30 x 20 cm model), or diameter (e.g., 30 cm disc).".
- P3028 scopeNote "A manifestation may have one or more identifiers associated with it. The identifier may be assigned as part of an international numbering or coding system (e.g., ISBN, etc.), as part of a national system (e.g., legal deposit number), or it may be assigned independently by the publisher or distributor of the manifestation (e.g., government publication number, music publisher's number, clearinghouse inventory number, etc.). A manifestation identifier may also be assigned by a bibliographer, musicologist, etc. The manifestation identifier may comprise both a numeric component and a textual or coded component identifying the system under which it was assigned and, or, the agency or individual that assigned the number, so as to render the identifier unique to the manifestation.".
- P3029 scopeNote "E.g., free to members of a particular association.".
- P3030 scopeNote "Access restrictions may be based in copyright, or they may extend beyond the protections guaranteed in law to the owner of the copyright.".
- P3031 scopeNote "E.g., call number, accession number, bar code, etc. The number is normally assigned by the institution that holds the item. The item identifier may also include a name or code identifying the institution or repository in which the item is housed, and a name or code identifying a particular collection or sub-unit within the institution (e.g., a rare book collection, a branch library, etc.).".
- P3032 scopeNote "The technique is used primarily to signal differences between individual copies of early printed books. There are various formulae for constructing the fingerprint (e.g., the one specified in Fingerprints = Empreintes = Impronte, published by the Institut de Recherche et d’Histoire des Textes in Paris).".
- P3035 scopeNote "E.g., missing pages, plates, etc. Condition may reflect other aspects of the physical condition of the item as well (e.g., brittleness, faded images, etc.).".
- P3036 scopeNote "E.g., deacidification, restoration, etc. Treatment history may also comprise details of the treatment process (e.g., chemical solutions used, techniques applied, etc.), the date the treatment was applied, etc.".
- P3037 scopeNote "E.g., chemical wash. Scheduled treatment may also comprise details of the planned treatment process and the scheduled date of application.".
- P3038 scopeNote "E.g., restricted to supervised on-site use, etc.".
- P3039 scopeNote "E.g., Donald Horne, A. A. Milne, Ellery Queen, etc. A name may include one or more forenames (or given names), matronymics, patronymics, family names (or surnames), sobriquets, dynastic names, etc. A person may be known by more than one name, or by more than one form of the same name. A bibliographic agency normally selects one of those names as the uniform heading for purposes of consistency in naming and referencing the person. The other names or forms of name may be treated as variant names for the person. In some cases (e.g., in the case of a person who writes under more than one pseudonym, or a person who writes both in an official capacity and as an individual) the bibliographic agency may establish more than one uniform heading for the person.".
- P3041 scopeNote "E.g., Major, Premier, Duke, etc.; Sir, Mrs., etc.".
- P3042 scopeNote "E.g., III, Jr., etc.; the Brave, Professional Engineer, etc.".
- P3043 scopeNote "E.g., Royal Aeronautical Society, IBM, Séminaire européen sur la recherche en éducation, Friedrich Witte, etc. A corporate body may be known by more than one name, or more than one form of the same name. A bibliographic agency normally selects one of those names as the uniform heading for purposes of consistency in naming and referencing the corporate body. The other names or forms of name may be treated as variant names for the corporate body. In some cases (e.g., in the case where a corporate body is known by different names at different periods in its history) the bibliographic agency may establish more than one uniform heading for the corporate body.".
- P3045 scopeNote "E.g., Los Angeles, Bretton Woods, Oxford University, etc. The place may comprise the name of the state, province, territory, and, or, country as well as the local place name.".
- P3046 scopeNote "E.g., the date of incorporation.".
- P3047 scopeNote "E.g., Inc., Ltd., etc.; firm, musical group, etc.".
- P3053 scopeNote "The source for acquisition/access authorization will normally also include an address for the publisher, distributor, etc. A manifestation may be associated with one or more sources.".
- P3054 scopeNote "A manifestation may be associated with one or more fabricators or manufacturers.".
- P3055 scopeNote "The date (normally a year) may be a single date of publication or release, or a range of dates (e.g., in the case of a serial publication). In the absence of a date designated as the date of publication or release, a copyright date or a date of printing or manufacture may serve as a substitute.".
- P3056 scopeNote "A manifestation may be associated with one or more publishers or distributors.".
- P3057 scopeNote "The place of publication may comprise the name of the state, province, territory, and/or country as well as the local place name. A manifestation may be associated with one or more places of publication or distribution.".
- P3058 scopeNote "The edition/issue designation pertains to all copies of a manifestation produced from substantially the same master and issued by the same publisher/distributor or group of publishers/distributors.".
- 1 scopeNote "The purpose of this vocabulary is record-keeping and exchange, and likewise is its application context. The actual vetting mechanisms of the certifications in question are out of scope.".
- Event scopeNote "Used to describe bibliographic related events such as conferences, hearing, etc.".
- place scopeNote "Used to relate an event such as a conference to the geographical place where it happens, for example Paris.".
- product scopeNote "Used to link an event such as a conference to an outcome (a product) of that event, for example, an article, a proceeding, etc.".
- sub_event scopeNote "Used to link big events with smaller events such as workshops that happen in the context of a conference.".
- time scopeNote "Used to describe the timing of an event. For example, when a conference starts and stops.".
- contributor scopeNote "Used to link a bibliographic item to one of its contributor: can be an author, an editor, a publisher, etc.".
- created scopeNote "Used to describe the creation date of a bibliographic item".
- date scopeNote "Use to link a bibliographic item to the date of an event. Check dcterms:created and other for proper specializations for this property".
- description scopeNote "Used to describe a bibliographic resource.".
- format scopeNote "Used to describe the format of a bibliographic resource.".
- isReferencedBy scopeNote "Used to relate a reference citation to a bibliographic resource.".
- issued scopeNote "Used to describe the issue date of a bibliographic resource".