Distinct objects for predicate scos:scopeNote sorted by frequency with mapping to SKOS

ResourceCountSKOS mapping
"By convention, skos:broader is only used to assert an immediate (i.e. direct) hierarchical link between two conceptual resources."@en2
"The term 'legal entities' includes, but is not limited to, unique parties that are legally or financially responsible for the performance of financial transactions or have the legal right in their jurisdiction to enter independently into legal contracts, regardless of whether they are incorporated or constituted in some other way (e.g. trust, partnership, contractual). It excludes natural persons, but includes governmental organizations and supranationals."^^xsd:string2
"Used to describe a bibliographic resource."@en2
"Used to describe the title of a bibliographic resource"@en2
"A concept may be a member of more than one concept scheme."@en1
"A concept scheme may be defined to include concepts from different sources."@en1
"By convention, skos:broaderTransitive is not used to make assertions. Rather, the properties can be used to draw inferences about the transitive closure of the hierarchical relation, which is useful e.g. when implementing a simple query expansion algorithm in a search application."@en1
"By convention, skos:narrowerTransitive is not used to make assertions. Rather, the properties can be used to draw inferences about the transitive closure of the hierarchical relation, which is useful e.g. when implementing a simple query expansion algorithm in a search application."@en1
"By convention, skos:notation is used with a typed literal in the object position of the triple."@en1
"Labelled collections can be used where you would like a set of concepts to be displayed under a 'node label' in the hierarchy."@en1
"Ordered collections can be used where you would like a set of concepts to be displayed in a specific order, and optionally under a 'node label'."@en1
"This is the property we choose to describe the given name of a Person related to a bibliographic resource. This is the first name of a person."@en1
"This is the property we choose to use to describe the family name of a person related to a bibliographic resource."@en1
"This property may be used directly, or as a super-property for more specific note types."@en1
"This property should not be used directly, but as a super-property for all properties denoting a relationship of meaning between concepts."@en1
"Ued to describe an organization related to bibliographic items such as a publishing company, etc."@en1
"Use to link a bibliographic item to the date of an event. Check dcterms:created and other for proper specializations for this property"@en1
"Used to describe a Person related to a bibliographic ite such as an author, an editor, etc."@en1
"Used to describe any "agent" related to bibliographic items. Such agents can be persons, organizations or groups of any kind."@en1
"Used to describe bibliographic related events such as conferences, hearing, etc."@en1
"Used to describe rights related to a bibliographic resource."@en1
"Used to describe the content of a bibo:Document and othr bibliographic resouces. We suggest to use this property instead of the deprecated "bibo:content" one."@en1
"Used to describe the creation date of a bibliographic item"@en1
"Used to describe the format of a bibliographic resource."@en1
"Used to describe the issue date of a bibliographic resource"@en1
"Used to describe the subject of a bibliographic resource."@en1
"Used to describe the timing of an event. For example, when a conference starts and stops."@en1
"Used to link a bibliographic item to its publisher."@en1
"Used to link a bibliographic item to one of its contributor: can be an author, an editor, a publisher, etc."@en1
"Used to link a bibliographic resource to the language used to express it."@en1
"Used to link an agent to its homepage (which is a web page accessible using a URL)."@en1
"Used to link an agent with an image that depict it."@en1
"Used to link an agent, related to bibliographic things, to a place where it is based near: can be a city, a monument, a building, etc."@en1
"Used to link an event such as a conference to an outcome (a product) of that event, for example, an article, a proceeding, etc."@en1
"Used to link big events with smaller events such as workshops that happen in the context of a conference."@en1
"Used to name the locality of a publisher, an author, etc."@en1
"Used to relate a reference citation to a bibliographic resource."@en1
"Used to relate an event such as a conference to the geographical place where it happens, for example Paris."@en1