Terminology
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Terminology therefore denotes a more formal discipline which systematically studies the labelling or designating of Concepts particular to one or more subject fields or domains of human activity, through research and analysis of terms in context, for the purpose of documenting and promoting correct usage. This study can be limited to one language or can cover more than one language at the same time (multilingual terminology, bilingual terminology, and so forth) or may focus on studies of terms across fields.
Terminology is not connected to Information retrieval in any way but focused on the meaning and conveyance of concepts. "Terms" (i.e. index terms) used in an information retrieval context are not the same as "terms" used in the context of terminology, as they are not always technical terms of art.
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Overview
The discipline of terminology is based on its own theoretical principles and consists primarily of the following aspects:- analysing the concepts and concept structures used in a field or domain of activity
- identifying the terms assigned to the concepts
- in the case of bilingual or multilingual terminology, establishing correspondences between terms in the various languages
- compiling the terminology, on paper or in Databases
- managing terminology databases
- creating new terms, as required
Types of terminology
A distinction is made between two types of terminology:- Ad hoc terminology, which deals with a single term or a limited number of terms
- Systematic terminology, which deals with all the terms in a specific subject field or domain of activity
Terminology as a discipline
As a discipline, terminology is related to Translation, alongside which it is often taught in universities and translation schools. Large translation departments and translation bureaus will often have a terminology section, or will require translators to do terminology research.Typology
Terminology is also defined by context, the study of terms primarily concerned with organizing them by the context in which they are used. These contexts may include:- Military terminology
- Political terminology
- Religious terminology
- Scientific terminology
- Technical terminology
- Rail terminology
See also
- Applied linguistics
- Concept
- Controlled vocabulary
- Critical vocabulary
- Dictionary
- Glossary
- Interpreting
- Jargon
- ISO/TC 37
- Lexicography
- LSP dictionary
- Ontology
- Orismology
- Reference work
- Specialised lexicography
- Terminology standardization
- Translation
- Taxonomy
- Technical terminology
- Terminology planning policy
- Terminology extraction
- Translation
References
- Sonneveld, H, Loenning, K: (1994): Introducing terminology, in Terminology, p.1-6
- Wright, S.E.; Budin, G.: (1997): Handbook of Terminology Management, Volume 1, Basic Aspects of Terminology Management, Amsterdam, Philadelphia, John Benjamins 370 pp.
External links
- Terminology Blog
- Terminology from the OTTIAQ website
- TermNet - International Network for Terminology
- Infoterm - International Information Centre for Terminology
- ISO Technical Committee 37 "Terminology and other language and content resources" (ISO/TC 37)
- Muegge, Uwe (2007). "Disciplining words: What you always wanted to know about terminology management". tcworld (tekom) (3): 17–19 . http://www.tekom.de/upload/alg/tcworld_307.pdf.
- Faoterm from the FAO Terminolgy website
- The Online Dictionary of Language Terminology
- TermSciences, the Scientific Terminology Database
