Table for the 35 triples for predicate dc:description

SubjectObject
?:Citation Oriented Bibliographic Vocabulary"A vocabulary to describe a general data model for scholarly citations. It covers three primary classes: events, agents, and bibliographic reference types. It is designed to offer a solid general relational model for citation metadata, and also to provide a specific superset of reference types in standard formats like BibTeX, RIS, and Refer/Endnote."
?:Description of a Project (DOAP) vocabulary"Das Vokabular "Description of a Project (DOAP)", beschrieben durch W3C RDF Schema and the Web Ontology Language."@de
?:Description of a Project (DOAP) vocabulary"El vocabulario Description of a Project (DOAP, Descripción de un Proyecto), descrito usando RDF Schema de W3C y Web Ontology Language."@es
?:Description of a Project (DOAP) vocabulary"Le vocabulaire Description Of A Project (DOAP, Description D'Un Projet), décrit en utilisant RDF Schema du W3C et OWL."@fr
?:Description of a Project (DOAP) vocabulary"Slovník Description of a Project (DOAP, Popis projektu), popsaný použitím W3C RDF Schema a Web Ontology Language."@cs
?:Description of a Project (DOAP) vocabulary"The Description of a Project (DOAP) vocabulary, described using W3C RDF Schema and the Web Ontology Language."
?:Description of a Project (DOAP) vocabulary"プロジェクトの説明の語彙(DOAP)。W3C RDF SchemaとWeb Ontology Languageで作られた。"@ja
?:DoCO, the Document Components Ontology"DoCO, the Document Components Ontology, provides a structured vocabulary written in OWL 2 DL of document components, both structural (e.g. block, inline, paragraph, section, chapter) and rhetorical (e.g. introduction, discussion, acknowledgements, reference list, figure, appendix), enabling these components, and documents composed of them, to be described in RDF. It imports the Discourse Elements Ontology (http://purl.org/spar/deo) and the Document Structural Patterns Ontology (http://www.essepuntato.it/2008/12/pattern), and uses seven rhetorical block elements abstracted from the SALT Rhetorical Ontology and the Ontology of Rhetorical Blocks (ORB)."@en
?:DoCO, the Document Components Ontology?:doco%20architecture.png
fabio:FaBiO, the FRBR-aligned Bibliographic Ontology?:FRBR%20diagram%20with%20new%20Fabio%20verbs.png
fabio:FaBiO, the FRBR-aligned Bibliographic Ontology"FaBiO, the FRBR-aligned Bibliographic Ontology, is an ontology for recording and publishing on the Semantic Web descriptions of entities that are published or potentially publishable, and that contain or are referred to by bibliographic references, or entities used to define such bibliographic references. FaBiO entities are primarily textual publications such as books, magazines, newspapers and journals, and items of their content such as poems, conference papers and editorials. However, they also include blogs, web pages, datasets, computer algorithms, experimental protocols, formal specifications and vocabularies, legal records, governmental papers, technical and commercial reports and similar publications, and also anthologies, catalogues and similar collections. FaBiO classes are structured according to the FRBR schema of Works, Expressions, Manifestations and Items. Additional properties have been added to extends the FRBR data model by linking Works and Manifestations (fabio:hasManifestation and fabio:isManifestationOf), Works and Items (fabio:hasPortrayal and fabio:isPortrayedBy), and Expressions and Items (fabio:hasRepresentation and fabio:isRepresentedBy)."^^xsd:string
foaf:Friend of a Friend (FOAF) vocabulary"The Friend of a Friend (FOAF) RDF vocabulary, described using W3C RDF Schema and the Web Ontology Language."
oa:Open Annotation Data Model"The Open Annotation Core Data Model specifies an interoperable framework for creating associations between related resources, annotations, using a methodology that conforms to the Architecture of the World Wide Web. Open Annotations can easily be shared between platforms, with sufficient richness of expression to satisfy complex requirements while remaining simple enough to also allow for the most common use cases, such as attaching a piece of text to a single web resource. An Annotation is considered to be a set of connected resources, typically including a body and target, where the body is somehow about the target. The full model supports additional functionality, enabling semantic annotations, embedding content, selecting segments of resources, choosing the appropriate representation of a resource and providing styling hints for consuming clients."@en
?:The Discourse Elements Ontology (DEO)"DEO, The Discourse Elements Ontology, is an ontology written in OWL 2 DL that provides a structured vocabulary for rhetorical elements within documents (e.g. Introduction, Discussion, Acknowledgements, Reference List, Figures, Appendix), enabling these to be described in RDF. It uses some of the rhetorical block elements from the SALT Rhetorical Ontology and the Ontology of Rhetorical Blocks."@en
?:The Event ontology" This ontology deals with the notion of reified events--- events seen as first-class objects. It only defines one concept: Event, which may have agents (actively participating), factors (passively participating), products, and a location in space and time. Regarding the ontological status of event tokens, they are seen as the way cognitive agents classify space/time regions "
?:The Pattern Ontology Describing documents by means of their structural components"The idea of using patterns to produce reusable and high-quality assets is not new in the literature. Software engineers, architects (as Alexander who first introduced this term) and designers very often use – or rather reuse – patterns to handle problems which recur over and over. Patterns have also been studied to modularize and customize web ontologies (http://ontologydesignpatterns.org). They guarantee the flexibility and maintainability of concepts and solutions in several heterogeneous scenarios. We've been investigating patterns for XML documents for some time. The overall goal of this research is to understand how the structure of digital documents can be segmented into atomic components, that can be manipulated independently and re-flowed in different contexts. Instead of defining a large number of complex and diversified structures, we have identified a small number of structures/patterns that are sufficient to express what most users need. Our idea is that a low number of patterns are enough to capture the most relevant document structures."@en
rdf:The RDF Concepts Vocabulary (RDF)"This is the RDF Schema for the RDF vocabulary terms in the RDF Namespace, defined in RDF 1.1 Concepts."
?:WGS84 Geo Positioning: an RDF vocabulary"A vocabulary for representing latitude, longitude and altitude information in the WGS84 geodetic reference datum. Version $Id: wgs84_pos.rdf,v 1.22 2009/04/20 15:00:30 timbl Exp $. See http://www.w3.org/2003/01/geo/ for more details."
fabio:analog item"An analog item is an exemplar of an analog manifestation only and it is always stored in a storage medium suitable for analog objects, such as paper, vinyl discs and films."@en
fabio:digital item"A digital item is an exemplar of a digital manifestation only and it is always stored in a storage medium suitable for digital objects, such as CDs, DVDs, HDs and the Web."@en
fabio:excerpt"An excerpt is more general than a quotation, and is generally used to indicate a re-published extract from a book, instruction manual, film, radio programme, etc, that need not be what someone said. For example: Oxford 01865 Oxshott 01372 Oxted 01883 Oxton 01578 is an excerpt from the UK Dialling Codes section of the Oxford Telephone Directory. Similarly, the following concluding passage from William Wordsworth's poem Lines written a Few Miles above Tintern Abbey is an excerpt rather than a quotation: Nor wilt thou then forget, That after many wanderings, many years Of absence, these steep woods and lofty cliffs, And this green pastoral landscape, were to me More dear, both for themselves and for thy sake."@en
fabio:expression"A fabio:Expression can only have part or be part of another fabio:Expression. Moreover, it can be a representation only of a fabio:Work, and it can be embodied only in fabio:Manifestation(s)."@en
co:has next item"Given the list (I[1], I[2], ... , I[i-1], I[i], I[i+1], ... , I[n-1], I[n]), the next item of I[i] is I[i+1]."@en
co:has previous item"Given the list (I[1], I[2], ... , I[i-1], I[i], I[i+1], ... , I[n-1], I[n]), the previous item of I[i] is I[i-1]."@en
?:has publication date"The date on which a document or entity is published. The date can be expressed in three different formats: - yyyy-mm-dd (i.e., xsd:date) - yyyy-mm (i.e., xsd:gYearMonth) - yyyy (i.e., xsd:gYear)"@en
co:has size"CO defines the size of a collection as the sum of the number of times entities that are part of the collection appear in it. This means that co:size considers how much each entity is involved by a particular collection, i.e.: - the size of the set {a, b, c} is three - the size of the bag [a, a, b, b, b, c] is five - the size of the list (a, b, c, b, a, b, c, c) is seven"@en
co:is followed by"Given the list (I[1], I[2], ... , I[i-1], I[i], I[i+1], ... , I[n-1], I[n]), the item I[i] is followed by I[i+1], ... , I[n-1] and I[n]."@en
co:is preceded by"Given the list (I[1], I[2], ... , I[i-1], I[i], I[i+1], ... , I[n-1], I[n]), the item I[i] is preceded by I[i-1], ... , I[2] and I[1]."@en
fabio:item"A fabio:Item can only have part or be part of another fabio:Item. Moreover, it can be an exemplar only of a fabio:Manifestation."@en
fabio:manifestation"A fabio:Manifestation can only have part or be part of another fabio:Manifestation. Moreover, it can be an embodiment only of a fabio:Expression and it can be exemplified only by fabio:Item(s)."@en
?:open.vocab.org"This vocabulary was originally openly-editable at http://open.vocab.org/. The editing interface has been retired and this data dump published in its place."
deo:problem statement"A concise description of the issues that needed to be addressed by a work described in the document."@en
fabio:quotation"A quotation is a repetition of what someone has said, and is presented "within quotation marks", for example: On June 4th 1940, Winston Churchill made a speech on the radio that has since become famous, that included the words: " . . . we shall fight on the beaches, we shall fight on the landing grounds, we shall fight in the fields and in the streets, we shall fight in the hills; we shall never surrender . . ." Similarly, the words "but Brutus is an honourable man" from Mark Antony's funeral speech in Shakespeare's play Julius Caesar is a quotation, since Mark Antony says these words in the play."@en
fabio:term dictionary"A term dictionary is a collection of subject terms."@en
fabio:work"A fabio:Work can only have part or be part of another fabio:Work. Moreover, it can be realized only by fabio:Expression(s)."@en